Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Modernarchitecture PDF
Modernarchitecture PDF
Introduction
Chronology
Essays
1. The Skyscraper
2. The Modern House
3. Modern Religious Architecture
4. The Modern College Campus and Modern Buildings on Campus
5. Modern Art Museums
Architect Lists
The following essays and lists of architects are intended to further the study of modern
buildings that may qualify as National Historic Landmarks. The buildings are organized
by type and evaluated in terms of architectural significance.
American architects began to experiment with styles beyond the traditional neoclassical
in the early nineteenth century. Styles were chosen for their historical associations and
the buildings were considered architecturally pure versions of the past. By the end of the
century, architects felt free to combine styles in an “eclectic” manner, without such
concern for stylistic origins. New technologies and building materials encouraged this
emerging experimentation. If this was all modern, however, it was certainly not
“modernism.” When European modernism arrived in the United States in the 1920s no
one could mistake it for anything that went before. Historians quickly labeled this early
phase of modern architecture the International Style. It was short-lived. The white,
geometric forms were too bleak for Americans, especially since they came without the
social meaning of their European counterparts.
The International Style was imported to the United States, but its early development was
not without American influence. As European architects began experimenting in wild
new forms of architecture, materials and forms, they studied the designs of Frank Lloyd
Wright, whose work had been published in portfolios by 1910. Nothing Wright designed
remotely resembled the sleek European buildings, but none could deny that his work was
both modern and impossible to ignore. As these essays will illustrate, different forms of
modern architecture with very different sensibilities were able to develop side by side in
America. Frank Lloyd Wright and his Prairie School influenced all American architects,
even immigrants like Richard Neutra and Walter Gropius.
By the 1950s, modern architecture had been popularized to the point where it lost its
shocking newness. The developers of Levitttowns and other postwar subdivisions
introduced popular versions of “the modern home.” While middle-class Americans
enjoyed the luxury of picture windows, carports and split-levels, the architectural
profession moved beyond what most people would consider domestic space. Philip
Johnson’s famous Glass House was the architectural equivalent of the artist framing a
blank canvas. Once everything had been removed but glass, leaving the essence of a
building, there was no place left to go. Postmodernism developed in the late 1950s and
early 1960s as a rejection of the blankness of modernism. It was all about adding layers
of meaning, however artificial. Although refreshing at the time, this self-conscious style
could not sustain itself. Architects of the twenty-first century are designing modern
architecture that is colored by its own modernistic past. And, according to architectural
histories, that past has already stood the test of time. Postmodernism only dates back
about forty years, yet Robert Venturi’s work appears in every survey.
The buildings discussed in the following essays were chosen as examples of modernism
in America, roughly from the late 1920s to the early 1960s. Whether or not we
appreciate these buildings, they represent a key moment in our history, a time when all
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historical reference was thrown aside in favor of something new and unexplored. From
our perspective, the explosion of modern architecture is dulled by familiarity. But in the
1920s a line was crossed that we can barely comprehend. Buildings went from being
cultural books--their stories revealed in symbols and inscriptions rich in historical
meaning--to being mute wonders of technology suggesting infinite possibility. The
architectural historian and critic John Jacobus, Jr., reminds us that “nearly every present-
day architect, whatever his station or real sentiment, at least professes allegiance to the
outward materialistic manifestations of the creative revolution that took place with the
International Style.”1 Modern buildings exemplify the search for the limits of building
and design, the exploration of new interpretations of what is comfortable, and the effort
to maximize human potential through building.
The five building types were chosen in an effort to discuss the greatest number of
potential NHLs possible. The buildings were selected purely from an architectural
standpoint, and no research was done as to the feasibility of nomination or current
condition. Some of the buildings are obviously worthy of NHL status; others deserve
further research. The essays are intended as a starting point for future work and are by no
means exhaustive.
The architect lists were developed to aid researchers in their search for criteria meeting
architectural significance. In my opinion, the work of architects on the A-List qualifies
as exceptionally significant in the history of architecture. These architects and
architectural firms were nationally, and in most cases internationally, famous for their
work, and their merit is demonstrated by honors (all have received the A.I.A. Gold
Medal), critical acclaim from the press, and scholarly evaluation. In some cases, B-List
architects also qualify, but further research is required. There are undoubtedly important
architects who have not been listed. Buildings listed after the short biographies of A-List
architects were selected as examples of their best work. The buildings on the B-List were
chosen based on mention in popular books, magazines and encyclopedias. In both cases,
the architects selected were active between the 1920s and 1960s. Architects who
completed their first buildings after 1960 are not listed, though some are discussed in the
essays and some of their buildings are considered for potential nomination.
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A CHRONOLOGY OF MODERN ARCHITECTURE IN AMERICA
1847 The first steel section rolled at the Trenton Iron Works in Trenton, New Jersey
1857 The first elevator installed in a commercial building, the Haughwout Building, New
York; founding of the American Institute of Architects
1858 Frederick Law Olmsted and Calvert Vaux design Central Park in New York City
1868 Design and Construction of the Equitable Life Insurance Building, first skyscraper
designed with a passenger elevator; M.I.T. is the first university to establish a department
of architecture
1879 The First Leiter Building, designed by William Le Baron Jenney, is the first
skyscraper featuring skeleton construction
1896 Louis Sullivan publishes essay, “The Tall Building Artistically Considered”; Julia
Morgan is the first woman admitted to the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris
1901 Frank Lloyd Wright delivers lecture, “The Art and Craft of the Machine;” designs
first prairie house
1910 Publication of the Ausgefuhrte Bauten und Entwurfe (first “Wasmuth Portfolio”),
plans and drawings of Frank Lloyd Wright’s work
1916 New York establishes zoning regulations for skyscraper design; Frank Lloyd
Wright invents “American System Ready-cut” method of prefabrication.
1918 Willis Polk designs the Hallidie Building, San Francisco, the first true example of
the curtain-wall applied to a large urban structure; World War I defense housing
programs administered by U.S. Housing Corp. (U.S. Dept. of Labor) and Emergency
Fleet Housing Corp. (U.S. Shipping Board).
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1919 Work of Wiener Werkstatte (Art Deco style) introduced to United States in New
York; Walter Gropius founds and directs the Bauhaus in Weimer, Germany, and later in
Dessau (until 1928)
1921-1922 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe introduces two glass skyscraper projects, idealized
prototypes of his 1950s work
1922 The Chicago Tribune hosts competition for its tower and Eliel Saarinen’s influential
design takes second place.
1923 The first building standard for structural steel design published by the American
Institute of Steel Construction
1928 Clarence Stein and Henry Wright design Radburn, New Jersey.
1929 The Crash and beginning of Great Depression; Mies van der Rohe’s German
Pavilion is displayed at the Barcelona International Exposition; John D. Rockefeller’s
restoration of Williamsburg, Virginia, begins; Richard Neutra’s Lovell House is finished
1934 National Housing Act passed, providing Federal mortgage insurance and
establishing the Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
1937 Frank Lloyd Wright designs Fallingwater; begins Usonian house development;
receives commission for Johnson Wax building; Walter Gropius arrives in U.S. and
becomes professor of architecture at Harvard University; Laszlo Moholy-Nagy
establishes Chicago Institute of Design; U. S. Housing Authority established
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1938 Mies arrives in Chicago and begins teaching at the Armour Institute (future Illinois
Institute of Technology); MOMA organizes an exhibition of the Bauhaus from 1919 to
1928 and publishes catalog; Gropius becomes chairman of the architecture department at
Harvard, a position he holds until 1953
1940 Alvar Aalto teaches part-time at MIT and designs dormitory on campus
1945 Elizabeth Mock edits Built in the U.S.A. 1932-1944, an exhibition catalog for the
Museum of Modern Art, New York; Eric Mendelsohn teaches at Berkeley; John Entenza
introduces Art and Architecture magazine’s Case Study Houses program, commissioning
eight houses over the next five years
1951 Design and Construction of Mies van der Rohe’s 860-880 Lake Shore Drive
Apartments, the first apartment buildings sheathed entirely in glass; Design and
Construction of SOM’s Lever House, the prototype of prestigious corporate buildings;
Louis Kahn designs his first museum, the Yale University Art Gallery, opened in 1953
1956 The National Park Service launches Mission 66, a ten-year park development and
improvement program promoting modern architecture in the national parks
1966 the Museum of Modern Art publishes Robert Venturi’s Complexity and
Contradiction in Architecture (written in 1962)
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THE SKYSCRAPER
The skyscraper is arguably the most important building type to emerge in the
modern era. Its origins and early history are surrounded by myth, in part, because art and
architectural historians of the 1920s and 1930s, such as Sigfried Giedion and Thomas
Tallmadge, wanted to establish credibility for the modern movement. More recently,
scholars have pointed out that the skyscraper concept dates back to antiquity, that the new
building type was hardly an American invention, that it was not born in Chicago and that
improvements in technology were not the only reason for its creation.2 As this essay
illustrates, the skyscraper rose from humble commercial beginnings to become the icon
diminish its height and decrease its aesthetic presence. In the twentieth century, the
skyscraper was celebrated for its functional form and architects went to great lengths to
create the illusion of revealed structure. As it transformed the shape, economics, and
demographics of the American city, the skyscraper reflected current architectural trends
early nineteenth-century, when cast-iron facades and skeletons first appeared in masonry
commercial buildings. James Bogardus, an inventor and engineer, used cast-iron fronts
in his New York Laing Stores Building (1848, demolished) and Duane Street Factory
Johnston featured a form of cast-iron skeleton construction.3 After the introduction of the
elevator in 1857 and a decade of experimentation with the new machinery, tall buildings
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began to spring up throughout New York City. 4 Historians Winston Weisman and Carl
Condit argue that the Equitable Life Assurance Society Building (1868-70, demolished;
Gilman & Kendall, Architects and George B. Post) was the first skyscraper: it was double
the height of the average office building, had been designed with a passenger elevator
and featured iron construction. Equally credible historians have claimed that Richard
Morris Hunt’s Tribune Building (1872-75, demolished) and Post’s Western Union
Building (1873-75, demolished), both of which were two stories and over a hundred feet
taller than the Equitable, “may properly be considered the first skyscrapers.”5 As this
difference of opinion illustrates, technology played an important role in defining the new
building type during the 1860s and 1870s and continues to be a preoccupation of
contemporary scholars.
New York was the center of American culture in the nineteenth-century, but when
the fire of 1871 devastated Chicago, a unique opportunity appeared for designers and
engineers to experiment with new building methods. Over the next twenty years,
created a demand for steel framing, better ventilation and every means of improved fire-
usually credited for designing the first tall office building employing skeleton
construction: the First Leiter Building in Chicago (1879, demolished), which had
exterior brick pillars and interior iron columns.6 Six years later, Le Baron Jenney’s
Home Insurance Building became the first with a complete metal skeleton, though some
interior walls were load bearing. By 1890, the Manhattan Building boasted sixteen
stories of pure skeletal construction. Perhaps more important than his contribution to the
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design and engineering of tall buildings was Le Baron Jenney’s studio, which included
of the skyscraper and often overshadow stylistic advances, the aesthetic contribution of
American architect, became known in the 1860s and 1870s for his original houses and
public buildings, particularly libraries. He was not considered a skyscraper designer, but
his masterful Marshall Field Wholesale Store (1885-87, demolished), which was inspired
“Richardson’s work immediately inspired, among others, three of the most impressive
Chicago buildings to rise in the Loop during the late eighties…These are Adler &
Monadnock.”7
The influence of the Marshall Field Wholesale Store is, perhaps, least apparent in
the end of construction in masonry. The buildings are most similar in their conservative
use of new technology--both employ cast and wrought iron columns and beams only as
interior elements--and in their emphasis on pure, powerful form. It was by accident that
Daniel Burnham and John Root broke the cultural boundaries of the skyscraper type.
Their Reliance Building of 1894, a fifteen-story tower featuring Chicago windows, was
originally designed to be five stories. When it was decided to build another ten, the
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architects simply added additional levels without attempting to resolve the composition
with a cap or cornice. Such an omission hardly seems revolutionary today, but at the time
Whether they admitted it or not, Victorian architects were wrestling with the
problem of how to create a new building type with an antiquated architectural language.
The vertical piling of floor upon floor had no architectural precedent, and while some
practitioners were satisfied with merely extending the mid-section of a traditional five-
story building, others demanded something more. During the last years of the nineteenth
design, and, although his writings are often contradictory, he designed a series of
influential buildings: the Wainwright in St. Louis (1890-91, NHL), the Guaranty in
Buffalo (1894-95, NHL), and the Bayard in New York (1897-98, NHL). In the evolution
“tall by emphasizing the projecting vertical piers from base to cornice.”8 The first of
these was a classic Victorian framework; the second, the idea of the “lofty” tower,
became the quest of the next century. It was Sullivan, not his successors, who coined the
term “form follows function,” but, as his work illustrates, he understood this in a
Victorian context. Despite the modern look and spirit of the tall building at the turn of
the century, society was not ready to accept any structure without vestiges of traditional
ornamentation, and during the early years of the twentieth century, Gothic, Art Deco and
an assortment of other styles celebrated new heights. This eclecticism, also described as a
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return to classicism, has been seen as a result of the conservative influence of the 1893
World’s Columbian Exposition. For whatever reason, the work of the Chicago School
failed to impress its generation, and only the architects who embraced neoclassicism,
such as Daniel Burnham, went on to have continued success. By the turn of the century,
technology was no longer the primary force behind skyscraper design because the most
In the 1890s, the tower became the most popular method of packaging a building
over twenty stories high. The use of the tower form as an appendage to the main
structure dated back to the 1850s, when it appeared in the Jayne Building, and remained a
popular means of adding height two decades later, as demonstrated by the Tribune and
Western Union Buildings. One of the first and most impressive tower skyscrapers was
Bruce Price’s twenty-two story American Surety Building (1894-95), which stood 312
feet high. Towers were in vogue up to World War I, the Beaux-Arts Singer Building
(1908, demolished) by Ernest Flagg is an important example, with more limited numbers
appearing in the 1920s. New York’s most famous early twentieth-century skyscraper, the
efficiency and beauty of mounting a tower on a wide base. This not only increased
square footage, but also added novelty to a skyline with an overabundance of towers.
Perhaps most important, the Woolworth Building became the symbol of New York City.
Since the skyscraper’s birth, critics and promoters alike had speculated on its
urban impact, and while some predicted that tall buildings would be the death of cities,
others imagined the flourishing of a truly modern metropolis. If views diverged as to the
future of urban America, all could agree with architect Cass Gilbert’s turn of the century
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assessment of the skyscraper as “a machine that makes the land pay.” Greed was
obviously a major factor in the growth and distribution of skyscrapers, and, therefore, in
the shape of cities. The 1916 zoning laws in New York were an important catalyst in
reconfiguring the design of tall buildings. New York designers were forced to carve
away at a structure’s silhouette in order to provide light and air for neighboring buildings;
relatively small lots and lack of height restriction also favored the tower form. Chicago
limited the height of skyscrapers until 1923, when a zoning law allowed for taller
buildings but restricted total volume. This, along with the fact that Chicago lots tended to
be larger, resulted in more blocklike buildings, usually featuring a central light court.
These distinctions help to explain why the focus of skyscraper innovation shifted to New
But before zoning laws and market forces transformed the skyscraper, an
important design competition played a major role in its aesthetic development. In 1922,
the Chicago Tribune sponsored a competition for its new headquarters, challenging
designers to create “the world’s most beautiful office building.” From over two hundred
and fifty submissions, the Tribune chose John Mead Howells and Raymond Hood’s
Gothic design, a limestone shaft with set-backs ornamented by gargoyles and buttresses
modeled after French cathedrals.9 Eliel Saarinen was a close second with his “romantic
tiered tower,” one of several rejected proposals that influenced the next generation of
skyscraper designers. By 1930, Hood’s Daily News Building, if still gothic, was also
early twentieth-century called “modernistic,” such as the Art Deco Chrysler Building
(1928-30, NHL) by William Van Alen and the Empire State Building (1930-31, NHL) by
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Shreve, Lamb and Harmon.10 At 102 stories and 1,250 feet, the Empire State surpassed
the Woolworth Building and the Eiffel Tower in height and quickly became the new
symbol of New York. During the 1920s and 1930s, height had become an obsession
among skyscraper designers and their patrons, both for reasons of profitability and fame;
The construction of Rockefeller Center (1928-40, NHL), the New York complex
place throughout these transitional decades. By its completion, the Center appeared
Center presented a new means of solving the problems of skyscraper congestion. The
Center was planned with a series of low and high-rise buildings and a plaza that gave the
ensemble urban continuity and allowed pedestrians room to appreciate the tall buildings.
This was a new method of controlling the skyscraper--the creation of a “skyscraper city”-
-which provided another solution to the problems plaguing the planners who devised the
While Rockefeller Center was underway, George Howe and William Lescaze’s
Philadelphia Savings Fund Society Building brought the avant-garde International Style
to America. The P.S.F.S. Building (1932, NHL) was designed so that each functional
the facade. And yet, despite the show of function, the P.S.F.S. Building is very stylized
in both its shape and use of fine materials. This building has been seen as a successor to
the Chicago School tradition and even compared to Gropius’s Bauhaus at Dessau.11 In
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2003, the National Historic Landmark P.S.F.S. Building has lost nothing of its modern
aura.
Although Frank Lloyd Wright only designed a handful of tall buildings, his
In the tradition of H. H. Richardson and Louis Sullivan, Wright sought a new American
Wright’s 1895 project for the Luxfer Prism Skyscraper featured a ten-story skeletal grid
of glass panels. In 1905, Wright introduced a bold design in his five-story Larkin
Building in Buffalo, and the famous Robie house in 1909 broke with almost every
convention. Wright’s work found a limited audience in the United States, which was
architects who would later immigrate to the United States, such as Mies van der Rohe,
eagerly read his Wasmuth Portfolio of 1910 and 1911. In the 1930s, Wright designed the
Johnson Wax Research Tower (1936-39, NHL) in Racine, Wisconsin, featuring rounded
corners and strip windows that did, indeed seem to grow from within its administration
building. His 1956 project for a mile-high skyscraper in Chicago seemed outlandish, as
well as possible, at a time of such profound technological and social change. The fifteen-
story Price Tower in Bartlesville, Oklahoma (1953-55) was based on a project for a
twenty-story apartment building designed in 1928. If Frank Lloyd Wright stood apart
from the mainstream development of American architecture, he also extended the realm
The quest for a crystal tower that had been a fantasy for Wright and Mies van der
Rohe in the twenties--both created several glass skyscrapers that remained in project
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form--soon became a reality. Although the “first true example of the curtain-wall applied
to a large urban structure,” Willis Polk’s Hallidie Building in San Francisco, which
featured an all-glass facade, appears to have had little influence on East coast building
technology.12 The shimmering “glass box” type of skyscraper that has since become
ubiquitous in American cities evolved during the 1940s and 50s. Pietro Belluschi studied
skyscraper, his Equitable Savings and Loan Building (1948) in Portland, Oregon. This
created the illusion of a smooth surface. The United Nations Secretariat (1948-50) in
who produced an early sketch of two skyscrapers housing the secretariat and the meeting
halls on either side of a low scale General Assembly building. The final design was
attributed to Wallace Harrison & Max Abramowitz. The relatively flat facades of the
United Nations building contained over 2,730 green windows, while the narrower sides
of each skyscraper were perfectly smooth, white marble. Harrison and Abramowitz went
on to design the Alcoa Building (1952) in Pittsburgh, which was ornamented with
level in both quantity and quality of skyscraper design, growing to become a model of
production of significant skyscrapers began with the Lever House (1951), designed by
Gordon Bunshaft, who was also inspired by the work of Mies van der Rohe. A block of
Park Avenue was devoted to the new building, which was essentially two steel and glass
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slabs, a horizontal first story with a vertical tower above, set back to provide open space.
Lever House provided the relief from the traditional walled effect of tall buildings and
was one of the earliest skyscrapers to deliver some of the promises of modernism: public
space, light, and a sense of possibility. An early example of the metal and glass curtain
wall at this scale, Lever House established a new standard for prestigious corporate
design.
During the 1950s, no one did more to define the future of skyscraper design than
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, who achieved Sullivan’s goal of form following function,
and his own: less is more. Mies exposed the buildings’ essential structural components,
repeating them as ornamental units, with a technician’s sense of proportion and scale.
Mies' most famous early skyscrapers, the 860-880 Lake Shore Drive Apartments (1951),
were the first apartment buildings sheathed entirely in glass. The Seagram Building
(1958, with Philip Johnson) reached new heights in its lavish use of fine materials and
technical perfection, as dictated by its Park Avenue, New York, location. In retrospect,
the Seagram Building has been called the precursor of contemporary glass box
almost more closely the formula of Mies’ Lake Shore Drive Apartments in Chicago than
he did himself in the design of the Seagram Building the following year.”13
One might compare the evolution of the skyscraper to a roughly parallel road
taken by modern art on its path to total abstraction and the questioning of art itself. After
the repeating structural module became the solution, there was no longer a problem to
solve. Mies and his followers created beautiful buildings that could be appreciated as
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works of art; imitators could do little but repeat the procedure. By the 1960s, two trends
had become apparent: architects were beginning to rely on decorative elements and
historical allusions to vary the formula and application of the signature curtain wall was
diversity to skyscraper production that, in retrospect, would reinvigorate the work of the
1950s. The irony of the ironic postmodern style is that its effort to legitimize both
popular and historical references often resulted in a lack of any real meaning.
One example of a 1960s skyscraper that stood apart from its peers is the Ford
Foundation Building (1967) in New York City, designed by the successor firm to Eero
praised in architectural history surveys for its considerate and inspiring use of interior
space to alleviate the intensity of the typical corporate office building. Most of the
offices look into an interior atrium that rises the full height of the building, reducing
valuable corporate space but vastly improving the work environment. In an AIA Journal
survey of the country’s best buildings, practitioners, critics and historians nominated the
Ford Foundation eleven times, ranking it among the top ten most significant buildings
The skyscraper has forever altered the urban landscape. In the words of former
New York Times architecture critic Ada Louis Huxtable, the skyscraper is “essentially an
economic formula,” but it also represents “image, status, power and prestige...cultural
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Fitch, James Marston. American Building: the Historical Forces that Shaped It. New
York: Schocken Books, 1973. (2nd Edition. 1947)
Huxtable, Ada Louise. The Tall Building Artistically Reconsidered: The Search for a
Skyscraper Style. New York: Pantheon Books, 1985.
Landau, Sarah B. and Carl W. Condit. Rise of the New York Skyscraper, 1865-1913.
New Haven, Yale University Press, 1996.
Mujica, Francisco. History of the Skyscraper. 1929. Reprint. New York: Da Capo
Press, 1977.
Van Leeuwen, Thomas A. P. “The Skyward Trend of Thought: Some Ideas on the
History of the Methodology of the Skyscraper,” in American Architecture: Innovation
and Tradition. David G. De Long, et al., eds. New York: Rizzoli, 1986.
Willis, Carol. Form Follows Finance: Skyscrapers and Skylines in New York and
Chicago, 1995.
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Chrysler Building, New York
Empire State Building, New York
Philadelphia Saving Fund Society Building, Pennsylvania
Daily News Building, New York
McGraw Hill Building, New York
Rockefeller Center, New York
The following skyscrapers potentially meet the criteria for NHL designation:
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THE MODERN HOUSE
In a 1970 essay, the architectural historian Vincent Scully describes the “suburban
1915.17 As he has shown, the freedom of plan that we think of as modern dates back to
Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello (1770-1809), which “broke out of the box” over a
hundred years before Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie houses. During the nineteenth
century, a staggering assortment of architectural styles were available for imitation, but
by the turn of the twentieth century, a neocolonial vernacular began to emerge that would
become increasingly popular by the 1930s. If the modern house was a product of a
century’s change, modernism as a style burst onto the architectural scene with hardly any
notice and instantly challenged the modern tradition. During the 1920s, European
modernism came to the United States, along with the assumption that architecture could
bring about social transformation. In response to the wartime housing crisis, European
never had such cause to be socially concerned, although attempts were made to devise
became the dominant style for modern houses in this country, it forever altered American
vernacular architecture. Today, new tract homes may come with porticos and Cape Cod
details, but they also feature openness, lightness and flexibility, the watered-down legacy
of modernism.
During the late nineteenth century, Henry Hobson Richardson led the
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his most influential urban residence, the Glessner House in Chicago (1885-87, NHL),
Richardson emphasized the distinction between public façade and private courtyard. One
demonstrates how a more open plan, with rooms grouped around large ‘living halls’
could transform the dark, Victorian house into a modern villa.18 After 1880, Richardson
had begun to seek an architecture “in even greater harmony with the American
landscape,” which, as James F. O’Gorman points out, would prove inspiring for Louis
Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright, among others.19 The addition to the Robert Treat
Paine House in Waltham, Massachusetts (1880-81, NHL), and the E. W. Gurney House
at Pride’s Crossing, Massachusetts (1884-86), show the role landscape would come to
play in developing a native, and later, “modern” American architecture. Charles Follen
McKim and Stanford White both assisted in Richardson’s office before forming their
own firm, McKim, Mead and White, with William Rutherford Mead in 1879. Between
1870 and 1920, McKim, Mead and White received over a thousand commissions, making
it the largest architectural firm in the world.20 McKim, Mead and White’s W. G. Low
House (1887) in Bristol, Rhode Island, is probably their most published residential work,
and its shingled triangular form remains inspiring. Richardson, McKim, Mead and White
and Bruce Price, who designed the William Kent House (1885) in Tuxedo Park, New
York, were the most significant architects of the era, designing houses with new types of
floor plans, abstract massing and a close relationship to the American landscape.
Frank Lloyd Wright was a teenager when Richardson and his followers began to
venture beyond Victorian eclecticism, but his architectural career would extend from
before the Chicago Exhibition brought Beaux-Arts classicism into vogue until the decline
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of modernism. And he would forever alter the history of American architecture.
Wright’s Prairie Style houses of the early twentieth-century came close to offering
ordinary Americans a new option for modern living. As Vincent Scully has noted, in
“the early twentieth century, a new vernacular was produced for a while in Chicago.”21
The Prairie houses, such as the Winslow House in River Forest, Illinois (1893-94), and
the Willits House in Highland Park, Illinois (1902), would be followed by an even more
“ordinary” type of house, the Usonian, which was usually built by its owners. The
Herbert Jacobs House (1936), the first of the Usonian houses constructed, featured a
concrete-slab floor providing gravity heating, a masonry core and dry wall construction.
It featured an unusual heating system developed out of the “Korrean room” principle
constructed in 1939 as part of the master plan for a teachers’ project at what is now
Wisconsin, demonstrated his first use of the “solar hemicycle,” with the rooms grouped
While Frank Lloyd Wright and his Prairie School followers were busy designing
homes in the Mid-west, California architects were experimenting with their own regional
design. Although the Prairie School undoubtedly influenced the work of Charles and
Henry Green, the brothers’ Gamble House (1907-08, NHL) is a singular work of
Craftsman Style architecture. With its bold use of wood forms emphasizing traditional
methods of joinery, its sleeping porches and terraces, and direct relationship to the
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(1914-16, demolished), which not only appears more modern, but more at peace with
California’s early history. Dodge House recalled Los Angeles’s Spanish heritage, but in
a modern idiom, with clean, geometric forms that were both historical and new. The year
Dodge House was completed, Gill’s former associate in Louis Sullivan’s office, Frank
Lloyd Wright, was designing his first California residence, the Hollyhock (Barnsdall)
block building system” that he would use in four homes over the next two years—the
Millard House in Pasadena, also known as “La Miniatura,” the Storer House in
Hollywood, and the Freeman and Ennis Houses in Los Angeles. In the textile blocks,
square tiles of cast concrete were knit together with steel reinforcing rods, Wright not
only found a method of creating the effect of a massive form (though the tiles were
hollow), but also delicate stylistic motifs reminiscent of Southern California’s Spanish
following in the United States, it found a haven in Southern California during the 1920s.
Two Viennese immigrants, Rudolph Schindler and Richard Neutra, were largely
responsible for energetic buildings that brought sunlight and sea air into the living space.
Both Schindler and Neutra briefly worked for Frank Lloyd Wright, and Schindler
House. On his own, Schindler designed the Lovell Beach House (1926) in Newport
Beach, California, which, with its cantilevers and poured concrete frame, foreshadows
1960s brutalism. The other icon of International Style residential architecture, Richard
Neutra’s Lovell “Health” House (1929), was toured by fifteen thousand people after its
23
construction.23 In addition to its novel style, the house featured an unusual number of
standardized elements, such as a light steel frame assembled from standard units and
polished plate windows set in standard metal frames.24 Eventually, such changes in
traditional building methods were intended to reduce the cost of materials and labor.
Neutra’s house may have attracted public attention, but Buckminster Fuller’s first
Dymaxion House (1929) was far more unusual. The cylindrical form contained an inner
service core and walls were suspended from a central tower; it was to be completely
1945 as a prototype for postwar housing in cooperation with Beechcraft, the airplane
company based in Wichita, and has been restored for display at the Henry Ford Museum
in Dearborn, Michigan.
Industrial Arts Group with a dozen experimental houses. The futuristic homes featured
modern materials and building methods and new home appliances in an attempt to bring
the out-of-date housing industry into line with more efficient manufacturing practices.
The House of Tomorrow, designed by George Fred Keck and William Keck,
demonstrated the use of glass and steel in housing design, an innovative structural
system, and standardized construction. The Armco Ferro House, designed by Robert
Smith, Jr., suggested the advantages of steel frames and Lustron enamel siding. Walter
Scholer’s Wieboldt-Rostone House, also steel frame, introduced a new building material,
Rostone. And the Florida Tropical House, by Robert Law Weed, added a touch of
whimsy with its pink tinted coral rock and built-in aquarium. Together, the group
embodies the ideals promoted by the fair and by modern architects, the use of science and
24
technology as sources for design and as symbols of progress and future prosperity. After
the Exposition six of the houses were transported by barge across Lake Michigan and
established in Beverly Shores, Indiana. The four described above remain extant,
As the Century of Progress homes illustrate, the stark modern style of the 1920s
was quickly modified by “vernacular, folkish and regional features” in the thirties and
occurred from 1935 to 1950, and during this time, regional influences resulted in
architecture more appropriate for a given climate and location. Frank Lloyd Wright’s
influence was clearly seen in the work of many architects who attempted to highlight the
unique aspects of their location; Alden B. Dow, designer of the A.B. Dow house in
Midland, Michigan (1935-41), and Harwell Hamilton Harris, architect of the H. H. Harris
House in Los Angeles (1939), were among those focusing on the importance of practical,
comfortable houses. A “Westcoast Redwood” style developed in the Bay Area and
spread to Portland, Seattle and other cities on the Pacific Coast. The “New England
Modern” of the East Coast was more influenced by the Colonial vernacular promoted by
McKim, Mead and White, but now abstracted beyond recognition. For example,
designed by Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer, emphasize its “sympathetic response” to
the New England countryside. The house was “constructed of a wood frame with vertical
board siding, painted brick, steel Lally columns, glass block, paving and low walls of
irregular stones, and a prefabricated cast-iron spiral stair.”25 Perhaps the best example of
the evolution from 1920s modern is illustrated by comparing Neutra’s Lovell House with
25
his later work in Southern California; the Kaufmann House in Palm Springs (1946)
Tremaine House in Montecito (1949), and Moore residence in Ojai (1954) are warmer,
In 1945, Arts and Architecture magazine launched the Case Study House
program, an attempt to reinvigorate a profession that had been severely limited by the
war. Led by its editor, John Entenza, the magazine became a client for eight architectural
firms its first year, and within five years thirteen houses were built and seven projects
created. The houses, all designed in Southern California, contributed to the region’s
reputation for radical design. Entenza hired established architects like Richard Neutra
(whose 1948 house was citied for excellence of design by the A.I.A.) and William
Wilson Wurster, but also less experienced designers, such as Charles Eames. The Eames
House (1949) in Santa Monica was steel frame, with a bridge structure between two
trusses that helped to elevate the house for a spectacular ocean view. Case study houses
introduced exciting new methods of design and materials, and, in an historical sense,
captured the contemporary essence of modernism. The magazine was sold in 1962 and
Two of the most photographed modern houses, Philip Johnson’s Glass House
(1949, NHL) in New Canaan, Connecticut, and Mies Van der Rohe’s Farnsworth House
(1951) in Plano, Illinois, demonstrate the extent to which modernism had matured after
the war. These closely related houses are more about the design profession and the limits
of modernism than realistic alternatives for living. The Glass House derived in large part
from the Farnsworth, the design of which Johnson had included in the 1947 Museum of
Modern Art exhibition of Mies’s work; it was a metal-framed, rectangular glass box with
26
a brick service core at one end. In contrast, the Farnsworth appeared “to hover pristinely
above the ground on its slim supports,” with its open-air porch balancing the enclosed
minimalism” was soon obvious.27 The client, Edith Farnsworth, found herself a spectacle
and described the experience as that of a caged animal. And yet, she visited the country
retreat for the next twenty years and the public remained interested, if critical. Without a
doubt, the Glass and Farnsworth Houses proved to be valuable investigations into the
domestic experience and continue to intrigue the next generation of architecture students.
glass houses and the work of Frank Lloyd Wright and his followers. Wright’s house for
Sol Friedman (1949) in Pleasantville, New York, features a circular roof of wood and
concrete. The plan is developed from two intersecting circles to form a main living and
service area, and sloping masonry walls have crenellated windows. There is nothing
translucent about this house, which seems part of the landscape despite its modern
features. In terms of residential work, the most innovative architect influenced by Wright
was Bruce Goff, who designed his first Prairie Style house in 1919 at the age of fifteen.
His first private commission, the Unseth House in Park Ridge, Illinois (1934-41), marked
the beginning of a career centered around eccentric houses perfectly suited to their
owners. Of these, the Bavinger House (1950-55) in Norman, Oklahoma, is among the
most famous and difficult to characterize. Historians Whiffen and Koeper use nautical
imagery to describe the Bavinger House’s “seashell curve in stone, which rises to support
a mast from which tension cables descend to support ‘floating’ bedrooms as well as a
27
Modernism was no longer considered avant-garde by 1960; in fact, decades
earlier it had become clear that modernism would not conquer society’s ills. A
designs for single family houses. Although the postmodern movement is beyond the
scope of this study, its origins have stood the test of time. Robert Venturi wrote the
and then designed his mother’s house as a manifestation of its principles. The Vanna
modernist forms, but with all their meaning attached, along with the irony of juxtaposing
new and old in shocking ways. Postmodernism had the noble goal of returning history to
modernism without relying on old-fashioned styles. The new movement was most
at Sea Ranch, one hundred and ten miles north of San Francisco. Sea Ranch (1964) was
environmentally sensitive houses. The landscape planner Lawrence Halprin chose Moore
Donlyn Lyndon, William Turnbull, Jr., and Richard Whitaker. Sea Ranch consisted of
“clusters and commons” of houses planned with environmental concerns in mind; the
houses were relatively small, sited carefully in relation to meadow and sea, and sprinkled
amidst undeveloped common areas. Sea Ranch has been called “…an inspired moment
in the history of the American house, comparable to the emergence of Frank Lloyd
28
Wright’s Praire House.”29 Today, the original Sea Ranch buildings are surrounded by
much larger, more ostentatious homes and the group’s integrity is threatened.
Although the modern house evolved in response to wartime, the need for mass
housing, and other social and economic factors, it is important to remember that such
homes were unusual, often the result of competitions, special patronage, or even
commissioned by architects’ relatives. In comparison with any other building type, house
design and construction is simple and inexpensive. It is in the realm of house design,
therefore, that architects were able to stretch the limits of the modern style, even to the
extending views and opening up floor plans. If in extreme cases such buildings were
unfit for habitation, they also expanded our perception of “home.” Modernism brought a
new depth to our understanding of the modern condition, and it was in domestic
architecture that the style found its most intimate representation. The selection of modern
houses described in this essay illustrates the evolution of the house from its Victorian
comfortable. This building type, perhaps more than any other, is best understood in its
29
BIBLIOGRAPY
Clark, Clifford Edward, Jr., The American Family Home, 1800-1960. Chapel Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1986.
Foy, Jessica and Thomas Schlereth, American Home Life, 1880-1930: A Social History
of Spaces and Services. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1992.
Friedman, Alice T. Women and the Making of the Modern House. New York: Harry N.
Abrams, 1998.
Jordy, William H. American Buildings and Their Architects: The Impact of European
Modernism in the Mid-Twentieth Century, vol. 3. New York: Oxford University Press,
1972.
Yorke, F.R. S. The Modern House. Great Britain: The Architectural Press, 1934.
30
Miller House, Indiana
Glass House, Connecticut
The following modern houses potentially meet criteria for NHL designation:
31
MODERN RELIGIOUS ARCHITECTURE
synagogue. The traditional architectural style of religious buildings is, to varying extents,
an expression of a faith and its sacred ritual. New building types, such as the skyscraper
and the airport are inherently modern. Private residences reflect contemporary lifestyles.
Even art museums offer new methods of sheltering centuries of culture. Religious
contemporary form. During the first half of the twentieth century, stylistic links with the
past were a requirement for most churches and synagogues. But by the late 1940s
modernism had entered mainstream American society, and modern architects began to
Stanton has pointed out, “ministry by television, the establishment of new religious
communities, and a need for buildings for social activities—which now play so large a
part in the work of churches—…created “demands for which there are no historic or
American life varied greatly, a few similarities are apparent. Modern architects
experimented with form, often focusing on a single geometric shape repeated throughout
a building; concrete became a means of emphasizing mass and power; and a spiritual
presence was often suggested by unusual sources of light or light filtered in unexpected
ways. This essay describes some of the most successful attempts to create religious
During the 1870s, Henry Hobson Richardson designed two churches that
introduced his interpretation of the Romanesque and the stone architecture of Boston’s
32
commercial buildings. The asymmetrical Brattle Square Church (1869-73) displays the
borrows from a range of French and Spanish Romanesque sources without direct
association; it is a classic example of the American architectural style that would come to
architecture that would not fully develop until Frank Lloyd Wright’s career matured in
the early twentieth century. The more traditional church designers active from 1870 to
1940 chose from an assortment of revival styles, such as the Gothic, Georgian, Spanish
the Madison Avenue Presbyterian Church (1906) in New York, for example, McKim,
Mead and White gave their Colonial Revival vernacular a Byzantine flavor. One of the
most prolific architects of religious buildings, Ralph Adams Cram (1863-1942), earned a
reputation for “correct” Gothic churches and college buildings.32 Along with his partners
Ferguson and Goodhue, Cram designed the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Detroit
(1908-11), the United States Military Academy Cadet Chapel (1910) at West Point and
Saint Thomas Episcopal Church (1913) in New York, among other important churches.
After the partnership ended in 1913, the architects went on to design some of their best
independent work: Goodhue’s St. Bartholomew’s Episcopal Church (1913), also in New
York, praised as a modern version of the Romanesque and Byzantine styles, and Cram’s
33
Romanesque, both in terms of a new freedom of plan and new combinations of materials.
While Cram and others spread the gospel of traditional revivalist styles, the type of
churches acceptable throughout the country, Frank Lloyd Wright designed his first
building in reinforced concrete, Unity Temple (1908, NHL) in Oak Park, Illinois. Wright
plan…”.33 The spare, cubic church, with its interlocking geometric planes enclosing the
(1910) in Berkeley, California, borrowed from every historical period, to the extent that it
employed for that a fantastically eclectic vocabulary of reminiscent forms.”34 The two
American architecture, and were able to create buildings for contemporary religious
groups flourishing in the United States.35 Another maverick architect in the Wrightian
tradition was Bruce Goff, designer of the Boston Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church
(1927-29, NHL) in Oklahoma. The building combined the Byzantine revival style,
considered traditional for churches, with a new American style, the skyscraper Art Deco,
which Goff called Modern Gothic. Although such innovative architects experimented
with modern religious architecture in the first decades of the twentieth century,
It was not until the 1940s that some of the most famous European modernists
received significant church and synagogue commissions in America, and they brought
34
with them their reaction to International Style architecture. Eliel and Eero Saarinen and
designed religious structures that contradict the stark coldness of early modernism.
Expressionist buildings were warm, “expressive” of faith, and emotionally powerful. The
Saarinens’ First Christian Church (1940-42) in Columbus, Indiana, is one of the earliest
revival styles, the church bell tower suggests Christian tradition. As the church minister
noted, the spare, modern style of the building expressed the congregation’s desire to
“restore the simplicity of the church as described in the New Testament.”36 The
in Cleveland, Ohio, departed from the traditional Near Eastern forms often used for
symbolize the unity of heaven and earth. Christ Lutheran Church (1949-50) in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, was the elder Saarinen’s final work, in collaboration with his
son, Eero, who designed the educational and fellowship building across the courtyard.
According to the pastor, the new building provided an ideal setting for the Lutheran
liturgy, accommodated the need for excellent acoustics and created a calm, reflective
(1953-56), his smallest religious building, is most often included in architectural histories
of the modern movement. At M.I.T. Eero Saarinen broke away from his father’s
preference for the “rambling façade composition,” and the modular regularity of Mies, to
design a chapel that perfectly illustrates the modernists’ new methods of using light as an
35
emotive force. The brick cylindrical building is set into a pool, allowing low arches cut
into the building to capture the reflection of sun on the water. Light from above
illuminates the altar and creates a shimmering sensation as it reflects against a suspended
metal screen. Over the next decade, Saarinen experimented with other geometric forms
Indiana, which is triangular in shape and North Christian (1963, NHL) in Columbus,
arguably the most influential and highly photographed modern religious building. The
demonstrating Le Corbusier’s belief that “the key is light and light illuminates shapes and
shapes have an emotional power…”.38 According to Harvard art historian Neil Levine,
Frank Lloyd Wright’s First Unitarian Church (1946-51) in Shorewood Hills, Wisconsin,
was one of his “emphatically representational designs of the 1940s that set the stage for
may have been an inspiration to Le Corbusier, but it bears little resemblance to the
French chapel. A “prairie” church, it was primarily constructed of oak and limestone,
which was brought to the site by members of the congregation. The triangular roof
design suggests hands in the position of prayer. The mysterious lighting of the pulpit
Expressionist architecture. Wright’s son, Lloyd (Frank Lloyd Wright, Jr.), designed his
best known work at this time, the Wayfarer’s (Swedenborg Memorial) Chapel in Palos
Verdes, California. The similarities with his father’s work are obvious, particularly in the
36
redwood framing of the chapel, which resembles that of Taliesin West. The chapel
features prisms of glass combined with triangles set in blue tile. Like many modern
The synagogue and church Frank Lloyd Wright designed in the 1950s illustrate
his fascination with geometric forms, which can be traced to his design for Unity Temple
(1905-8). Wright “selected a distinct geometric figure for the building’s basic form as his
concrete beams, its sloping glass walls become tent-like. Wright is purported to have
exercise in all aspects of the triangle, the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church (1956-
61) in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, explored the religious and architectural power of circles.
Santa Sophia, the mother church in Istanbul. Reinforced concrete cylindrical trussing
supports the concrete shell dome, originally surfaced in blue ceramic tile. The truss
system is then supported by the four concrete piers that anchor a Greek cross in plan on
the first floor. At balcony level, the cylindrical trussing is echoed in the fenestration
pattern.41
The work of Frank Lloyd Wright, however modern, always alluded to historical
tradition, and was, therefore, consistently very different from the work of his
contemporaries. Wright rejected the International Style and any movement that resulted
37
discovering the benefits of modernism as a style particularly useful in non-
denominational expressions of spirituality. The chapel for the United States Air Force
steel-tube framing with aluminum panels separated by narrow bands of stained glass.
Most impressive is the “relentless repetition of spiky bays” that conjures up “the nave and
spires of a Gothic church and the German Expressionist crystalline forms popular after
the First World War” in the minds of architectural historians, and, more readily, the
folded plane wings on the flight deck of an aircraft carrier.42 In terms of structure, the
a rectangular plan….The resultant cage was sheathed in silvery aluminum and set with
While SOM unveiled its highly publicized campus plan and dramatic chapel, a
much smaller but equally interesting religious building was constructed in the red rock
hills of Sedona, Arizona. The Chapel of the Holy Cross (1956) was a concrete and glass
structure designed around a colossal cross and built into living rock. A serpentine
concrete ramp leads from the parking area up to a courtyard in front of the chapel.
Through the paned-glass entrance façade, the view extends to the concrete cross spanning
the building’s opposite wall and to clouds outside that seem to float above the alter.
Although the chapel conforms to the liturgy of the Roman Catholic Church, and displays
the cross in an explicit fashion, it also manages to rise above its particular religion;
tourists from all faiths make pilgrimages to the building. The chapel gave its architects,
38
the San Francisco firm Anshen and Allen, immediate recognition in Architectural Record
experimentation with light and its symbolic spiritual qualities. Although Philip Johnson’s
Kneses Tifereth Israel Synagogue (1956) in Port Chester, New York, is essentially based
between the vertical slabs with which the visible steel frame is filled and also a curved-
Harmony, Indiana, took the issue of lighting to its extreme. The building is essentially an
outdoor room, an expansion of his concept for the famous 1949 Glass House. From a
distance the church appears to be all roof, a “shingled” billowing form pinned down at six
the building, but agree that the central, unroofed space gives the church its “distinctive
quality.”45
took on new forms in the late 1950s, forms that varied widely by architect, religious
affiliation and region. Compare, for example, Richard Neutra’s Community Church
(1959-61) in Garden Grove, California, with one of the most abstract designs of the
modern era, the First Unitarian Church and School (1959-63) in Rochester, New York,
designed by Louis I. Kahn. Neutra is not known for his religious buildings, and the
of spiritual fulfillment. Glass walls opened out to the parking lot, where families could
participate in the service from their automobile-pews. The Tower of Hope, designed in
39
the mid-60s by Sergei Koschin and Dion Neutra, loomed over the sanctuary, “more
prominent than anything else in Orange County except the nearby ‘Matterhorn’ at
Disneyland.”46 In contrast, Kahn’s First Unitarian Church is a quiet building, the exterior
offering no indication of its purpose. The interior is a meeting hall, with little to convey a
religious feeling but soft light illuminating the corners of the room. Kahn designed the
church around a centralized form, but emphasized the individual use of subservient
spaces. His description of the church suggests a flexible attitude toward building use. “I
drew the ambulatory to respect the fact that what is being said or what is being felt in a
sanctuary was not necessarily something you have to participate in. And so you could
walk and feel free to walk away from what is being said. And then I placed a corridor
next to it—around it—which served the school which was really the walls of the entire
area.”47 At the First Unitarian Church, Kahn sacrificed the purity of a modern design to
architect’s ego, was essentially postmodern in its conception. Religious buildings of the
next few decades would reflect such thinking, sometimes to the point of losing all sense
The depth and variety of modern religious architecture is illustrated by the work
of Pietro Belluschi, who became dean of the M.I.T. architecture department in 1951, and
Marcel Breuer, a professor at Harvard. Belluschi, arguably the most prolific architect of
modern religious buildings, was the principal designer or collaborator on over forty
completed works. The Italian-born Belluschi immigrated to the United States in 1923
and became nationally famous in the 1940s, primarily for his Equitable Savings and Loan
Association building completed in 1948. That year planning began for First Presbyterian
40
in Cottage Grove, Oregon. From its origins the church was a cooperative effort, the
result of group meetings with the congregation and continual revision of drawings to
accommodate its wishes. In this traditional wood frame building, the nave and chancel
were designed as a single space, with the nave brightly lit to symbolize the connection to
the outside community. The Douglas fir that sustained the local economy was used in the
board and batten exterior. Even Belluschi’s much more elaborate Portland church,
Central Lutheran Church (1948-50), featured wood arches, wood screens, glass, brick and
bronze.
Marcel Breuer’s works were massive, concrete structures, capable of humbling the
boldest parishioners.48 Before he had ever designed a ceremonial building, Breuer was
chosen over Gropius, Neutra and others as the architect for St. John’s Monastery and
collaborated with Hamilton P. Smith and the Italian engineer-architect Pier Luigi Nervi,
trapezoidal bell banner is pierced by a horizontal rectangle for bells and a vertical
opening for a cross, all of which rests on four sculpted supports forming an archway
entrance to the church. The main building’s honeycombed concrete and glass façade is
devoid of religious symbolism. One architectural landmark survey praises the church as
equally powerful; the one-hundred-foot high concrete bell tower is the focus of the
41
The St. Francis de Sales Church (1964-66) in Muskegon, Michigan, a collaboration
between Breuer and Herbert Beckhard, is a hyperbolic paraboloid with side walls of the
nave describing a double curve and reaching some seventy-five feet high. The apse,
dramatized by the convergence of a daring system of concrete planes and rigid arches, is
illuminated by cut-in skylights that direct intense natural light from above. Heroic in
aspiration and evoking the Gothic in spirit, Breuer sought the courage “to defeat gravity
and to lift the material to great heights, over great spans—to render the enclosed space a
The scholar of religious history Peter W. Williams has emphasized that the
brief essay has illustrated, modern architects used the design of religious architecture to
experiment with new forms and symbolism, but such efforts often stood alone. More
than any other building type, churches and synagogues represent the conflict between the
past and the future that modern architects are able to deny, to varying extents, in secular
commissions. Religious buildings of the modern era are relatively scarce and often the
only example of a particular architect’s effort to render spirituality in built form. For
these reasons, and the timeless power of such buildings to stir the emotions, modern
42
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Christ-Janer, Albert and Mary Mix Foley. Modern Church Architecture. New York:
McGraw Hill, 1962.
Chiat, Marilyn J. America’s Religious Architecture. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.,
1997.
Lippy, Charles H. and Peter W. Williams, eds. Encyclopedia of the American Religious
Experience. New York: Scribners, 1988.
Shear, John Knox, ed. Architectural Record: Religious Buildings for Today, New York:
F. W. Dodge, 1957.
Siry, Joseph. Unity Temple: Frank Lloyd Wright and Architecture for Liberal Religion.
New York: Cambridge University Press, 1996.
Williams, Peter W. Houses of God: Region, Religion and Architecture in the United
States. Urbana: University of Illinois, 1997.
The following modern religious structures are listed as National Historic Landmarks:
The following modern religious buildings potentially meet criteria for NHL designation:
43
Chapel of the Holy Cross, Sedona, Arizona (Anshen and Allen, 1956)
Roofless Church, New Harmony, Indiana (Philip Johnson, 1959-60)
Abbey Church (St. John’s University Church), Collegeville, Minnesota (Marcel Breuer,
Hamilton Smith, Pier Luigi Nervi, 1956-61)
Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, Milwaukee, Wisconsin (Frank Lloyd Wright,
1959-61)
Community Church, Garden Grove California (Richard Neutra, 1959-61)
Priory of St. Mary and St. Louis, St. Louis (Creve Coeur) Missouri (Hellmuth, Obata &
Kassabaum, 1962)
Annunciation Priory, Bismarck, North Dakota (Marcel Breuer and Hamilton Smith,
1959-63)
First Unitarian Church and School, Rochester, New York (Louis Kahn, 1959-63)
St. Francis De Sales Church, Muskegan, Michigan (Marcel Breuer and Herbert Beckhard,
1964-66)
44
THE MODERN COLLEGE CAMPUS AND MODERN BUILDINGS ON
CAMPUS
The college campus, a planned landscape of buildings and open space, essentially
originated in America. Although colonial builders imitated models they knew, such as
Oxford and Cambridge, American collegiate design was shaped by many factors: the
scarcely populated new country, the experience of the builders, and the availability of
building materials. In the end, none of the nine colleges designed before the Revolution
shared the same plan. Harvard laid out its original buildings in a three-sided courtyard,
Yale in a line facing a green, and William and Mary in a symmetrical relationship to a
central building. The idea of a college campus developed from the placement of new
buildings in a rural setting. Nassau Hall, the building designed for the College of New
Jersey (Princeton University) in 1757, stood a good distance from the road, a situation
that gave rise to the first use of the term “campus” in a collegiate context. The Princeton
plan of a single building in a green space was imitated at Brown, with University Hall in
1770; Dartmouth, with Dartmouth Hall in 1784-91; and Rutgers with Old Queen’s in
residential facilities, which increased the need for campus planning and the resemblance
of the campus to a small, self-sufficient city. By the nineteenth century, the “academic
The American tradition of campus planning was brand-new on the West Coast in
1888, when a significant early example of the enclosed quadrangle, the Stanford Quad,
was introduced at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. Two years earlier, Leland
45
Stanford had commissioned landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted to design a
master plan for Stanford. The architect originally chosen for the work was Henry
Hobson Richardson but, after his untimely death, the job went to his successors, Shepley,
Rutan, and Coolidge of Boston. The firm designed the buildings in the Mission Style,
incorporating a timeless sense of monumentality and modern ideas about planning for the
During the first decades of the twentieth century, new classical buildings were
traditional style for American campuses remained the Collegiate Gothic modeled after
Oxford and Cambridge. When the College of New Jersey became Princeton University
in 1896, it hired Cope and Stewardson to design a series of new buildings in the Gothic
style; Blair Hall, with its imposing tower, recalled the Tudor gates of English colleges.52
The famous gothic revivalist Ralph Adams Cram completed Princeton’s Graduate
such buildings modern. As late as 1928, Yale’s Harkness Memorial Quadrangle (1917),
a rambling Gothic structure, was praised as “one of the gems of modern American
architecture.”53
Before 1940, the beginning of a shift toward modernism was most apparent in the
design and planning of new college campuses. In 1938 construction began on two such
Chicago—designed by the two most famous architects in the country, Frank Lloyd
Wright and Mies van der Rohe. Although both colleges were created from scratch in a
modern style of architecture, without any preexisting buildings on site, the results could
46
not be more different. Wright designed a series of rambling, concrete-block buildings
said to emerge from the surrounding landscape; Mies’s academic village was glass and
steel frame buildings on a grid, intended to show the man-made in contrast with nature.
form a single structure that expands into a building and then is reduced to a walkway or a
garden. In a sense, this attitude recalled the historical origins of the American college,
with its monumental main building, and underscored the interdisciplinary nature of
education. At ITT, Mies discovered the clearest expression of every form, reducing all
elements to what he perceived as their essence; the buildings were discreet, rational and
illustrate what Wright and Mies might have done if given the opportunity to design and
By the mid-1950s, modernism was the style of choice and, in the work of many
architects, signs could be seen of a new effort to combine historical associations with
aspects of the International Style. A comparison of Mies’s ITT campus with Philip
Johnson’s master plan for the University of St. Thomas (1957) in Houston, Texas, shows
the extent to which Johnson had abandoned the pure rectilinear forms of his mentor. The
architectural historian John Jacobus, Jr., calls the St. Thomas plan “a blend of Mies’s
Industrial Classicism of the 1940’s with the Romantic Classicism of the 1820’s,” which
The mid-twentieth century was a turning point for modern architecture on the
college campus. Walter Gropius and The Architects’ Collaborative designed one of the
first large groups of International Style buildings in a collegiate setting, the Graduate
47
Center (1949) at Harvard University.56 The complex of eight buildings has been
criticized for its rigidity, and certainly by its completion American architecture was
University welcomed the designs of modern architects with a more flexible idea of
with modern architecture and hired Louis Kahn to design the Yale University Art Gallery
(1951-53). The four-story Mellon Gallery, which stood at the corner of Chapel Street,
featured a brick exterior with belt courses mirroring the lines of its neighboring buildings,
including the 1927 Beaux-Arts gallery by Egerton Swartwout. Inside, however, the
building boasted a modern tetrahedral ceiling, which provided both decorative space and
room for internal ducts and lighting. According to Vincent Scully, Kahn’s first major
Twenty years later, Kahn designed his last museum, the Yale Center for British Art
attempt to blend in with the surroundings. For his alma mater, Saarinen designed the
David S. Ingalls Hockey Rink (1956-59) which, with its giant reinforced-concrete
parabolic arch, has “an odd resemblance to an inverted boat.”58 Saarinen had learned
from his recent work on Kresge Auditorium (1953-56) at M.I.T. and adjusted the visual
downward thrust of the concrete dome by lifting both of the ends up with cantilevers.
The contrast between the interior of the roof, covered in natural timber boarding, and the
exterior black neoprene waterproofing solution is typical of Saarinen. While the rink was
under construction, Saarinen began designing Ezra Stiles and Morse Colleges (1958-62),
48
two residential/community buildings on a tight site between a neo-Gothic gymnasium
and the graduate school. His attempt at reconciling the architectural styles involved
covering the concrete with masonry and creating narrow, fortress-like windows.
Any anxiety over the integration of Saarinen’s buildings into the Yale campus
was overshadowed by the work of Paul Rudolph, who designed what one historian called
“the most provocative American building of the decade.” Rudolph, the chairman of
Yale’s art and architecture department, created the Art and Architecture Building (1958-
64), a structure not only bewildering in its thirty-seven levels, but controversial in its
techniques; the concrete was formed and treated to appear weathered, an effort that could
only be considered postmodern.59 While the Art and Architecture Building was raising
eyebrows, Rudolph completed the Married Graduate Student Housing (1962) complex.
These inherently conservative residential buildings feature concrete lintels and brick
walls and provide an example of how Le Corbusier’s influence became part of “the
two additional major buildings in 1964, the Beinecke Library by Gordon Bunshaft of
SOM and the Kline Science Center by Philip Johnson. Each had a demanding program—
shaped its design. The Beinecke has been compared to a gigantic jewel box with its
curtain walls of steel trusses framing translucent marble slabs.61 Alan Gowans observes
that the Beinecke’s “glowing amber walls created a most un-Modern reverential
atmosphere that strikingly recalled the effects of mosaics and windows of early Christian
basilicas, most especially San Vitale in Ravenna.” 62 Gowans sees such associations as
49
carrying on Yale’s Collegiate Gothic tradition in “subliminal medieval forms.” Other
critics have remarked on the building’s blatant lack of human scale in the selfish “quest
a grouping of towers, but actually a clever covering for an interior designed by scientists.
With its rich salt-glazed brick and defensible hilltop site, the Science Center also recalls
the medieval era as it foreshadows postmodernism. Architectural critics agree that the
Kline Tower successfully blends in with surrounding buildings, such as those in nearby
Pierson-Sage Square (1913-24), and acknowledges its role as part of a campus plan.
buildings to its traditional campus. More common was the addition of specific structures
fulfilling special needs, such as Baker House Dormitory (1948) at M.I.T. by Alvar Aalto
and Ferry Cooperative House (1950) at Vassar by Marcel Breuer. Aalto was teaching at
M.I.T. when he designed Baker House, a design combining International Style “rational
purism” and historical forms.64 Among students, the building would become best known
for its rough exterior walls with protruding bricks that aspiring rock climbers scale to
hone their skills. The “S” shape of the building follows the curves of the Charles River,
allowing the maximum number of student rooms to find views of the water. A
modern design in the interest of its users. The architectural historian William Jordy
modest building” and “somewhat bland.”65 As Jordy points out, by the 1940s
International Style modern architecture had been “domesticated” to suit a public that
required more comforts (however superficial) than the severe and stripped down avant-
50
garde style had to offer. Although Ferry House might be seen as progressive in its
purpose—to provide unsupervised living space for female college students—the design
includes many traditional elements that purists would consider concessions to a bourgeois
tradition. A variety of textured materials are featured, such as contrasting floor materials
and unpainted cypress siding for the window paneling. Rather than focusing on the
formal properties of open space, Breuer chose partitions for privacy, even at the expense
of abstract perfection. Aalto domesticated Baker House by using rough red brick, and its
unique undulating shape demonstrates how real use would supercede pure form in
Perhaps the most widely publicized new campus design of the 1950s was SOM’s
Air Force Academy (1955-62) in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Pushed up against the
Rocky Mountains but overlooking endless plains, the site was ideal for a college
dedicated to the modern science of aircraft. The campus was laid out on a Miesian grid,
and since the buildings were all new, the architects were able to create a unified plan in
which all sense of proportion disappeared; the geometric order of the buildings perfectly
mirrors that of a military institution. The parade grounds, with a landscape plan by
Vandenburg Hall. Only the chapel (discussed in the previous essay), which stands alone
on an elevated platform, breaks the grid pattern with its distinctive shape, height and
decoration. Although the Air Force Academy has been criticized for its “austere
atmosphere,” the design is generally seen as appropriate for its purpose. The campus is a
51
The Air Force Academy commission offered its architects complete freedom to
create a campus; the “clean slate” was located a significant distance from historic
Colorado Springs. As we have seen, it was more typical for architects to design in the
midst of an established campus, where compromises had to be made for both aesthetic
and practical reasons. In their design for an Art and Science Building at St. John’s
College (1958), Annapolis, Maryland, Richard Neutra and Robert Alexander were
commended for their ability to integrate old and new. The modern brick and flagstone
explained his designs through abstract principles suited to the architectural style; the
building attempted to “grasp and express this faith in values that transcend mere historic
In 1957, work began on Louis Kahn’s Alfred Newton Richards Medical Research
Building and Laboratory at the University of Pennsylvania. Although Kahn also faced
the challenge of integrating a new structure into an historic campus plan, his program for
a laboratory facility required many modern concessions. In its simplest form, the
building is a “central service block” surrounded by three laboratory towers, each with
peripheral stairs. Although modern in every sense, the building is also a complicated
series of geometric solids and voids that manages to harmonize with its neighbor, a
historian William Jordy gave Kahn’s laboratory the highest possible praise, calling it a
building that “has taught the profession” and an amalgamation of the “achievements of
52
the three greatest architects of the first half of the twentieth century [Le Corbusier, Mies
and Wright].”68
By the 1960s the full range of modernism could be seen in new college
buildings—vestiges of the International Style and the beginnings of what would become
postmodern. Le Corbusier’s only building in the United States, the Carpenter Center for
the Visual Arts at Harvard University, was designed in 1959 and completed in 1962.
With its geometric concrete forms, free plan, and sinuous ramp through the building, the
and to others as an innovative work in the “geometric style.”69 Unfortunately the ramp
did not function as intended, in large part because the site lacked the density necessary to
make it a popular thoroughfare. Le Corbusier’s associate on the project was Josep Luis
demonstrated this opinion in two projects located apart from Harvard’s main quadrangle,
where town and campus intermingled. Peabody Terrace (1964), married student
housing, consists of three skyscrapers located along the Charles River. Holyoke Center
(1965) hardly seems part of the University and provides a mixture of services in the midst
postmodernism, one of the most successful attempts to create a “student friendly” modern
campus took place at the University of California at Santa Cruz, beginning in 1963. The
master plan was designed by John Carl Warnecke & Associates, Anshen & Allen,
Theodore C. Bernardi, and Ernest J. Kump. Their innovative design divided the
53
university population into separate residential colleges, which included spaces for living,
studying and attending classes.71 The wooded site allowed colleges to seem isolated
from one another, even though they were within walking distance of central libraries and
other shared facilities. Automobile traffic was generally relegated to the periphery of the
campus, leaving pedestrian paths to become the primary means of transportation and
eliminating the need for parking lots. The Santa Cruz colleges demonstrated how
security.”72 This attitude is especially refreshing in the context of the emerging forms of
Brutalist architecture, such as massive concrete student centers and multi-use facilities
that can overwhelm and homogenize a campus. The Santa Cruz college experiment has
already stood the test of time; it is the only example of 1960s college architecture
By its very nature, the college campus demands unification—of plan and general
building type. Before a new building is erected on a college campus, it must undergo
rigid scrutiny by trustees, faculty and other advisors. Such demanding patrons contribute
to the high quality of modern architecture on college campuses. The most effective
campus plans keep their growth in check, develop an intimate, pedestrian center and
integrate an effective means of handling automobile traffic. When Yale decided to allow
modern architecture, it did not destroy a tradition of fine Collegiate Gothic or damage its
academic reputation. In fact, Yale demonstrated a healthy attitude towards growth and
progress, allowing for new buildings that might contribute to a fabric that now includes
“historic” modernism. As Paul Venable Turner has pointed out, a dramatic change took
place in campus planning during the 1950s and 1960s, when modernism became an
54
acceptable style. Suddenly buildings were allowed to stand alone, express a unique
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Gaines, Thomas A. The Campus as a Work of Art. Westport, Connecticut: Praeger, 1991.
Horowitz, Helen L. Alma Mater: Design and Experience in the Women’s Colleges from
Their Nineteenth-Century Beginnings to the 1930s. New York, 1984.
Newman, Oscar, “The New Campus,” Architectural Forum, vol. 124, May 1966, pp. 44-
51.
Schmertz, Mildred F., ed. Campus Planning and Design: an Architectural Record Book.
New York: McGraw Hill, 1972.
Scully, Vincent. American Architecture and Urbanism. Rev. ed. New York: Henry Holt,
1988.
The following modern college campuses and campus buildings are listed as National
Historic Landmarks:
The following modern college campuses and campus buildings potentially meet criteria
for NHL designation:
55
Stanford Quad, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California (Shepley Rutan and Coolidge,
1888)
Blair Hall, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey (Cope and Stewardson, 1897)
Harkness Memorial Quadrangle, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut (James
Gamble Rogers, 1917)
Florida Southern College campus, Lakeland, Florida (Frank Lloyd Wright, 1936-59)
Baker House Dormitory, MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts (Alvar Aalto, 1948)
Dexter M. Ferry Cooperative House, Vassar College, Poughkeepsie, New York (Marcel
Breuer, 1950)
Graduate Center, Harvard University, Cambridge (Walter Gropius, 1950)
Yale University Art Gallery, Yale University (Louis Kahn, 1951-54)
Art and Science Building, St. John’s College, Annapolis, Maryland (Richard Neutra &
Robert Alexander, 1958)
David S. Ingalls Hockey Rink, Yale University (Eero Saarinen, 1958)
United States Air Force Academy campus, Colorado Springs, Colorado (SOM, 1958-62)
Ezra Stiles and Morse Colleges, Yale University (Eero Saarinen & Dan Kiley, 1960-62)
Art and Architecture Building, Yale University (Paul Rudolph, 1961-63)
Beinecke Rare Book Library, Yale University (SOM, 1964)
Kline Science Center, Yale University, (Philip Johnson, 1964)
A. N. Richards Medical Research Building and Biology Laboratory, University of
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (Louis Kahn, 1957-1964)
Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Harvard University (Le Corbusier (1962)
University of California at Santa Cruz, campus, California (John Carl Warnecke, et al.,
1963-1970s)
56
MODERN ART MUSEUMS
The design of art museums posed a special challenge for modern architects. Not
only were these monumental civic buildings, but their contents were part of history and
its preservation. Much of the philosophy of early modernism—liberation from the past,
the development of new buildings for modern technology and emerging lifestyles—was
not applicable. It is not surprising that the major museums of the 1920s and early 30s
Art (1939), the country’s first public International Style building, marked a turning point
in modernist design. In this high profile New York City commission, Philip Goodwin
and Edward Durrell Stone departed from the formal Beaux-Arts arrangement to create an
informal, flexible exhibition space. Modern architects of the post-World War II period
collections without adhering to any style of the past. By the 1950s and 60s, architects
such as Philip Johnson and Frank Lloyd Wright were attempting to reintroduce
generations. The tension between addressing historical origins and offering something
sizeable collection of art. In America, the art museum is a modern building type, but its
architecture remained conservative until well into the twentieth century. The first public
art museum is thought to have been designed for the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Arts
57
in 1806 and was originally intended to house a collection of plaster casts. A mixture of a
native Federal style (including an eagle over the entrance) and bits of Palladian detailing,
the building was lost to fire in 1845. Even by that date, only two other art museums had
been constructed, the Greek Revival Trumbull Gallery at Yale College (1831-32),
designed by Colonel John Trumbull, and the Wadsworth Athenaeum in Hartford by the
firm of Alexander Jackson Davis and Ithiel Town. The Wadsworth Athenaeum, which
currently promotes itself as the country’s first art museum, can justifiably claim to be the
first such building designed by professional architects. In its playful use of Tudor details
in the Gothic Revival style, the Athenaeum contrasted with the Grecian Revival buildings
of the day and “pointed museum architecture toward a new stylistic freedom.”74
The work of James Renwick, Jr., illustrates the eclectic nature of design during
the second half of the nineteenth century. Renwick created the Smithsonian Institution
(1846-55) in what was considered a Neo-Romanesque style and began the Renwick
Gallery (also in Washington, D.C.), an early example of Second Empire in 1859. During
this time, architecture was chosen for its “associations,” and styles were deliberately
selected for their history. Frank Furness’s first nationally significant building, the
sources of Furness’s inspiration to the Englishman Owen Jones, who designed ornament
eclectic iron architecture.” If Furness’s Academy was a mixture of styles in the eclectic
tradition of his day, it also experimented with original ornamental forms and contained
58
what O’Gorman calls “one of the most impressive spaces in American architecture of any
period.”76
schemes by the Frenchman J. N. L. Durand and the famous Altes Museum (1823-30) in
Berlin by Karl Friedrich Schinkel. The basic floor plan was arranged on an axis, often a
reception gallery leading to a central staircase and nave, all of which was surrounded by
subtracting additional galleries or other spaces. On the exterior, the new museums were
formal, and obviously considered civic achievements, but were modeled after Greek
temples, Roman basilicas and Renaissance palaces. Richard Morris Hunt designed the
of Art in New York, completed in 1902. Hunt was the first American to study at the
Ecole, and his design for the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York is reminiscent of
Parisian civic monuments. The original design included grand wings enclosing
courtyards on either side of a main entrance pavilion, but only the central section was
completed before the architect’s death. In 1906 McKim, Mead and White created the
The earliest major museum to illustrate the new Beaux-Arts civic monumentality
was Ernest Flagg’s Corcoran Gallery (1893-95) in Washington, D.C. With its “Georgia-
marble walls rising resplendently above a granite base, its Grecian details extremely
refined, its massing horizontal and stately…it established a standard for museum
architecture.…”77 A few years later, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo, New
59
York, displayed a purer form of Greek-inspired architecture, the first “acropolis type”
museum in the United States. The famous sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens designed the
frequently imitated floor plan—a central entrance space serving as a gallery with
exhibition areas all on one level. Over the next several decades, the plans of these
prototypes would be imitated and combined throughout the country, at the Cleveland
Museum of Art, the Detroit Institute of Arts, the National Gallery of Art in Washington,
Beaux-Arts design and planning was at its height in the early twentieth century,
when the City Beautiful Movement promised to add grandeur to the urban centers of
cities across the country. In Philadelphia, an ambitious scheme centered around the
Benjamin Franklin Parkway, which was lined with civic monuments, culminating in the
Although the Philadelphia Museum of Art stands out for its sheer bulk and fine
height of City Beautiful planning in the 1920s, the Art Moderne or Art Deco style
became popular in America, and paved the way for even more dramatic change to come.
Despite its similar classical origins, the Museum of Fine Arts (1931-33) in Springfield,
Massachusetts, by Edward L. Tilton and Alfred Morton Githens is a humble building that
hardly compares to the magisterial Philadelphia museum. From a distance, this small,
unassuming building appears unabashedly modern, with its smooth exterior walls and
carved medallion ornaments. The building uses elements of classical vocabulary, but
60
there are no columns or colonnades. The plan is essentially an elongated rectangle with a
central lobby and stairwell around which offices and galleries are organized on two
floors. It is a simple, elegant plan executed in a version of modernism that does not seem
to have aged.78
It is not surprising that the first major art museum in the modernist style was the
Museum of Modern Art in New York, completed in 1939 just seven years after its
director coined the term “International Style” to describe the exhibit of new modern
architecture curated by Henry Russell Hitchcock and Philip Johnson. The building by
Edward Durrell Stone and Philip Goodwin was not only the first art museum to feature a
modern façade, but also the first to represent a new philosophy toward art and its
appreciation. The traditional elitism associated with viewing art was removed along with
the ornamentation and symbols of its power. Visitors gained access through a modest,
street-level entry; the early galleries were “a series of neutral, low-ceilinged spaces
successfully conveyed a new set of values, an achievement more often true of European
modernist architecture.
If MOMA paved the way for a reconceptualization of the art museum and its
social function, it did not diminish the power of “traditional” architecture. In fact, one of
the most famous and widely appreciated museums of the day, the National Gallery of Art
in Washington, D.C., was completed just two years later. Designed by John Russell
With its grand stairway and formal rotundas and galleries, the National Gallery could not
be a more typical museum. It is also typical that the country could embrace modernism
61
in New York City, but desire a more familiar symbol of its prominence in the nation’s
capitol. Over the next two decades, Americans would come to accept modernism as
worthy of their past. In the meantime, the National Gallery of Art was as modern, in its
By the 1950s, modern architecture had come into its own, and architects who had
Whereas MOMA made a point of removing ornamentation and the architect’s presence
from the visitor’s experience, the Yale University Art Gallery addition (1953) by Louis
Kahn explicitly exposed architectural elements and attempted to suggest a mood. One
could say it was full of the modern, stripped down style. Kahn’s building illustrated an
merely exposed such innovations, Kahn was able to use modern advances to express
emotion. Patrons were certainly moved by Kahn’s building, the first of what would
Ten years before Kahn’s Yale Art Gallery, Frank Lloyd Wright conceived of the
Guggenheim Museum in New York City, a building like none other. The museum is not
only entirely abstract, but designed around a unique form, a spiraling pathway, that
caused art to be viewed in a new way. During the design phase, patrons feared that the
building would become a modernist spectacle and draw attention away from the art
collection. Wright had every intension of diminishing the barrier between art and viewer,
that is, of democratizing the museum experience. The pictures were hung close to
ground-level without frames or glass on a tilted, outward curving wall in an effort to free
62
them from the traditional setting. Despite Wright’s effort to focus on the artwork, the
building does become a focal point; the spiraling ramp literally controls the movement of
visitors. Planning and executing the museum extended into the 1950s. The Guggenheim
is an important example of Wright’s mature work (he died in 1959, the year of its
completion), his desire to create a building expressing the sculptural power of concrete,
and the evolution of his obsession with spirals and circular forms. Perhaps most
A year before the birth of the Guggenhiem concept, in 1942, Ludwig Mies van
der Rohe designed his “Museum for a Small City,” a project reducing architecture to
nothing more than a container for art. Stripped of all historical and symbolic association,
the museum space was merely a solid floor and ceiling with walls of glass. Mies’s work
clearly influenced Philip Johnson’s architectural career, but at least one scholar has
argued that a comparison between Mies’s Cullian Hall (1958) and Johnson’s Proctor
Institute (1960) demonstrates their inherent differences. Mies took on a pioneering role of
eliminating “the barrier between the work of art and the living community” in his design
for Cullinan Hall (1958) at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Texas.81 The barrier
was lessened by an open plan, improvements in lighting, and better methods of installing
and displaying art—all characteristics of the new Museum of Modern Art which would
become commonplace in modernist museums. Helen Searing notes that Cullinan Hall is
a “perfected version” of Mies’s small city museum project, which the architect described
as “allowing complete flexibility” for the collection in a space that was “defining rather
63
than confining.”82 Mies approached the museum with the goal of freeing the collection
from its boundaries and the building from its own structure.
Before Philip Johnson designed the Proctor Institute, his critique of Mies’s
Design. During his tenure as director, Johnson published a monograph on Mies and
designed MOMA’s annex, which was followed a few years later by a sculpture court.
York (1960), resembles Cullinan Hall in its austerity and prominent exterior girders. But
continuation of interior and exterior space and a feeling of lateral movement reminiscent
“fundamentally traditional and classicizing.” As visitors enter the Proctor Institute they
notice the low space leading into the gallery, one of many indications of the separation
reflecting a deep-rooted urge to re-establish sensible contact with those elements of the
pre-modern architectural tradition—the very elements that had been rejected by the first
space and form.”83 Inside the Proctor Institute, Jacobus points out the resemblance
between the double-height central gallery, with its highly crafted balustrades on the stair,
and Germanic Romantic Classicism. In terms of such classical references, the Proctor
Institute has more in common with Wright’s Guggenheim Museum, which also uses
64
forms that might be considered Baroque, personal, and historical in a sense that was
Within the three years from 1960 to 1963, Johnson designed three important art
museums and an addition—the Proctor Institute, the Amon Carter Museum of Western
Art in Fort Worth, Texas (1961); the Sheldon Art Gallery for the University of Nebraska
at Lincoln (1962-3); and a wing at Dumbarton Oaks for the R.W. Bliss Collection of Pre-
Columbian Art. At a time when many architects were looking for the style after
modernism, Johnson became a champion of what would come to be called the new
Formalism. Taken as a group, which is most useful, Johnson’s museums show his
departure from the Miesian model, with its focus on form, to buildings that are more
concerned with the actual enclosed spaces, the transition from inside to outside, and
progression through the building. At the Amon Carter Museum, for example, a series of
exterior terraces climb a gentle slope up to the entrance, a sequence that is mirrored in the
tiered floors of the building as well. The Sheldon Art Gallery at the University of
features a low plinth and cornice line suggesting an ancient temple. Johnson uses
columns, pilasters, an arched entrance, and a formal stairway and even covers modern
materials with Italian marble. Such a blatant display of classical vocabulary, however
generation. The wing for the R. W. Bliss Collection of Pre-Columbian Art (1963) is a
sculpture in itself: eight circular glass pavilions form a series of interconnected insular
spaces. The wing relates more to exterior formal gardens and terraces than Dumbarton
65
While Johnson and his followers formalized or historicized modernism and
Venturi began to look towards Postmodernism, Marcel Breuer continued to offer fresh
version of modern architecture called Brutalism (from the French “beton brut”) explored
the qualities of roughly finished concrete to produce new sculptural forms. Like the
Guggenheim, the Whitney Museum of Art (1964-66) by Marcel Breuer and Hamilton
Smith demonstrates the qualities of concrete in a building that is also a monument. But
unlike Wright’s museum, the Whitney is aggressive in its monumentality; the dark grey
granite walls seem to challenge visitors to enter. The building turns traditional building
looming above. All the tricks of modernism are here: changes in ceiling height,
experimentation with materials, unusual window shapes, a sunken sculpture garden. The
interior is organized by an open grid ceiling that allows for partitions and contains
artificial lighting. As the name Brutalism suggests, the style brings with it both
foreboding connotations and heroic stature. Although Breuer and others would prove
that groups of “brutal” buildings can become oppressive, the Whitney is admirably suited
to its New York City location and purpose. It is one of the Breuer and Smith’s most
By the 1960s modern architecture was a given, but architects struggled with
and other efforts to come to terms with contemporary design . The Kimball Art Museum
(1967-72) in Fort Worth, Texas, by Louis Kahn managed to elude all classification.
According to critic Paul Goldberger, the building “has become probably the most revered
66
museum design of the second half of the twentieth century.”84 The museum’s simple
plan consists of a series of concrete vaults, some of which house galleries and others
garden courts, entrance areas and a reflecting pool. Although the row of concrete vaults
hardly appears spectacular on the outside, visitors are surprised to find a variety of
interior spaces. Even more surprising is the luminous source of natural light: skylights in
the vaults are expertly filtered to obtain the effects of natural lighting without damaging
the artwork. A visit to the Kimball is frequently described as mystical, and it is Kahn’s
use of light, as well as his choice of fine materials, such as oak, travertine and stainless
steel, that create such a moving experience for visitors. In the 1980s, a potential
expansion plan was dismissed when museum patrons protested any change in what many
modern buildings from the early 1970s that has already been judged worthy of
preservation.85
As a building type, the modern American art museum inspired its designers to
Museum “can almost surely be said to have initiated the popular postwar idea that the art
museum would be the ideal instrument for bringing together people of differing classes,
races and political persuasions.”86 In fact, the hope for this type of “democratic” viewing
of art dated back to the founding of the Museum of Modern Art in the 1930s. The
modern American art museum was intended to bring art to the people, and in that way it
came closer than any other building type to imitating the original goals of International
Style architecture.
67
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Brown, Michael. The New Museum: Architecture and Display. New York: Praeger,
1965.
Glaeser, Ludwig. Architecture of Museums. New York: Museum of Modern Art, 1968.
Hoyt, Charles. Public, Municipal and Community Buildings. New York: McGraw-Hill,
1980.
Jacobus, John M. Jr. Philip Johnson. New York: George Braziller, Inc., 1962.
Loud, Patricia Cummings. The Art Museums of Louis Kahn. Durham, N.C.: Duke
University Press, 1989.
Searing, Helen. New American Art Museums. New York: Whitney Museum of
American Art, 1982.
Stephens, Suzanne. Building the New Museum. New York: Princeton Architectural
Press, 1986.
The following modern public institutions and research facilities are listed as National
Historic Landmarks:
The following modern museums and libraries potentially meet criteria for NHL
designations:
68
National Gallery of Art (West Building), Washington, D.C. (John Russell Pope, 1941)
Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut (Louis Kahn, 1951-54)
Guggenheim Museum, New York (Frank Lloyd Wright, 1956-59)
Museum of Fine Arts, Cullinan Hall, Houston, Texas (Mies, 1958)
Munson-Williams-Proctor Institute, Utica, New York (Philip Johnson, 1960)
Amon Carter Museum of Western Art, Fort Worth, Texas (Philip Johnson, 1961)
Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska (Philip Johnson, 1963)
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, (Marcel Breuer and Hamilton Smith,
1966)
Kimball Art Museum, Texas (Louis Kahn, 1967-72)
69
EXCEPTIONAL MODERN ARCHITECTS (“A” LIST)
Although the Finnish architect Alvar Aalto only designed two buildings in the United
States, his practice influenced the growth and direction of the modern movement
worldwide. Aalto’s work was introduced in this country in 1938, when his Finnish
pavilion at the New York World’s Fair won first prize, and John McAndrew exhibited his
work at the Museum of Modern Art. As a designer, Aalto created a widely copied three-
legged stacking stool and introduced molded plywood. His skill with wood contributed
to his treatment of building materials, and his reputation for a sensitive interpretation of
International Style architecture. Aalto was awarded the Royal Gold Medal from the
Royal Institute of British Architects (R.I.B.A.) in 1957 and the American Institute of
Architects (A.I.A.) Gold Medal in 1963.
Sources: Gutheim, Frederick. Alvar Aalto. New York/London, 1960; Groak, Steven, et
al., Alvar Aalto, Architectural Monographs 4. London, 1978; Quantrill, Malcolm. Alvar
Aalto: A Critical Study. London, 1983; Schildt, Goran. Alvar Aalto: The Mature Years.
New York, 1991.
A student at Walter Gropius’ Bauhaus during the 1920s, Marcel Lajos Breuer made his
reputation as a designer of tubular steel furniture. When he followed his mentor to the
United States in 1937, Breuer entered into partnership with Gropius and became an
associate professor at Harvard’s School of Design from 1937 to 1946. For the next thirty
years, he produced prototypical residential designs, groundbreaking work in
prefabrication, and significant improvements in concrete technology from his office in
New York. One biographer has noted that “no other modern architect’s work has
remained as valid visually and technically for sixty years and more.” Breuer received the
A.I.A. Gold Medal in 1968.
70
Starkey House, Duluth, Minnesota, 1958 (Herbert Beckhard, Associate)
Hunter College Library, New York, 1959 (with R. F. Gatje)
Hooper House, Baltimore, Maryland, 1960 (Herbert Beckhard, Associate)
United States Department of Housing and Urban Development Headquarters,
Washington, D.C., 1963-1968 (with Herbert Beckhard; Nolen/Swinburne)
St. Francis de Sales Church, Muskegon, Michigan, 1966 (with Herbert Beckhard)
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 1966 (with Hamilton Smith)
Becton Center for Engineering & Applied Science, Yale University, New Haven,
Connecticut, 1970 (with Hamilton Smith)
Hubert W. Humphrey Building, Washington D.C., 1976 (with Herbert Beckhard;
Nolen/Swinburne)
Sources: Blake, Peter. Marcel Breuer: Architect and Designer. New York:
Architectural Record/The Museum of Modern Art, 1949; Hitchcock, Henry-Russell.
Marcel Breuer and the American Tradition in Architecture. Cambridge, Massachusetts,
1938; Jones, Cranston. Marcel Breuer 1921-1962. London, 1962; Papachristou, Tician.
Marcel Breuer: New Buildings and Projects. New York, 1970.
Buckminster Fuller didn’t consider himself an architect, but his work in design and
engineering went to the heart of modern architecture. The mass-produced, prefabricated
dymaxion house and geodesic dome provided less expensive, more resource conscious
models for post-war housing. Fuller’s work made use of new materials--his own “fibrous
building block” for lightweight building--and dome frames employing plywood,
aluminum and prestressed concrete. Over 300,000 geodesic domes were built around the
world, helping to solve the housing crisis in areas where skilled labor and other resources
were scarce. Along with his inventions, which included patents for a rowing device and
floating breakwater, Fuller left behind a philosophy of building and conservation far
ahead of its time. In 1970, Fuller received the A.I.A. Gold Medal.
Selected Works:
Dymaxion House, Dearborn, Michigan, 1947
United States Pavilion, Sokolniki Park, Moscow, 1959
Union Tank Car Dome, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 1958
United States Pavilion, Expo ‘67, Montreal Canada, 1967
Religious Center, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville, IL, 1971 (Fuller &
Sadao)
United States Research Station, Antarctica, 1972
Sources: Marks, Robert W. The Dymaxion World of Buckminster Fuller. New York,
1960; McHale, John. R. Buckminster Fuller. New York, 1962; Pawley, Martin,
Buckminster Fuller. London, 1990; Robertson, Donald W. The Mind’s Eye of Richard
Buckminster Fuller, New York, 1983; Rosen, Sidney, Wizard of the Dome--R.
Buckminster Fuller, Designer for the Future, Boston, 1969.
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Walter Gropius (1883-1969)
The German-born architect Walter Gropius is as famous for his philosophy as his
buildings. Gropius directed the Bauhaus, the most important school for modern
architects and designers in the world, and, after emigrating to America in 1937,
influenced a generation of American architects as head of the architectural department at
Harvard University. During an era in which other leading architects professed their
individual genius, Gropius taught the value of collaboration, and he practiced what he
preached. His Cambridge firm, The Architects Collaborative (TAC: Jean Bodman-
Fletcher, Norman C. Fletcher, John C. Harkness, Sarah Harkness, Robert S. McMillan,
Louis A. McMillan, and Benjamin Thompson), shared the responsibility for all work.
Although Gropius’ buildings in the United States hardly compared to his revolutionary
minimal housing designs of the 1920s in Germany, his philosophy of teamwork and
emphasis on the relationships between the design arts was of inestimable value to the
modern movement. Gropius received the Gold Medal from the A.I.A. in 1959.
Sources: Fitch, James Marston. Walter Gropius. New York, 1960; Giedion, Sigfried.
Walter Gropius. Paris, 1931; Isaacs, Reginald. Gropius: An Illustrated Biography of the
Creator of the Bauhaus. Boston, 1991; Nerdinger, Winifred, ed. The Walter Gropius
Archive: An Illustrated Catalogue of the Drawings, Prints and Photographs in the
Walter Gropius Archive at the Busch-Reisinger Museum, Harvard University. New York,
1990.
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Philip Johnson is not only an important modern architect, but a critic who helped to shape
the history of the modern movement in America. As the first director of the architectural
department of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Johnson collaborated with
Henry-Russell Hitchcock on the 1932 exhibition, “The International Style.” He invited
Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier to visit the United States for the first time, hired
Mies to design his apartment in 1930, and wrote an important monograph on Mies
published in 1947. An independently wealthy critic, Johnson brought the modern
movement to America as an architectural style, without the social ramifications of its
European origins. Johnson’s design career gained momentum in 1949, when he built a
glass house (Johnson House) in New Canaan, Connecticut, and showed the world what
modern architecture could do to the domestic realm. In 1958, Johnson collaborated with
Mies and Kahn and Jacobs on the Seagram Building, Park Avenue, New York, and in
1964, with Richard Foster on the New York State Theater, Lincoln Center. Although
historians praise Johnson most highly for his work of this time (his “Miesian” period), he
remains a lively presence in the architectural world of 2002. Johnson received the A.I.A.
Gold Medal in 1978.
Selected Works:
Philip Johnson House (Glass House), New Canaan, Connecticut, 1949 (NHL)
Hodgson House, New Canaan, 1951 (1956*) (Landis Gores, associated)
Schlumberger Administration Building, Ridgefield, Connecticut, 1952*
Leonhardt House, Lloyd’s Neck, Long Island, New York, 1956
Roofless Church, New Harmony, Indiana, 1960 (1961*)
Museum for Pre-Columbian Art, Washington, D.C., 1963
Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, 1963
Kline Science Center, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 1964 (with
Richard Foster)
Museum of Modern Art, East and Garden Wings, New York, 1964
New York State Theater, Lincoln Center, New York, 1964 (with Foster)
Boston Public Library, addition, 1973 (with Architects Design Group)
The work of Louis Kahn lifted the spirits of the American architectural community
during the 1950s and 60s, when the modern movement began to lose its missionary force
and architects struggled to find a direction. In fact, a journalist named Jan Rowan coined
the term Philadelphia School for a group of young architects loosely following Kahn’s
leadership (Mitchell/Giurgola, Robert Geddes, Robert Venturi and others). A professor
at Yale and the University of Pennsylvania, mentor and philosopher, Kahn was one of the
few architects of his day who was able to breath life into “functional” buildings. In his
words, he discovered “what the building wanted to be” and expressed that essence in a
modern idiom. Biographical accounts of Kahn emphasize both the human aspect of his
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buildings and the architect’s ability to teach and inspire. He received the A.I.A. Gold
Medal in 1971 and the Royal Gold Medal, R.I.B.A. in 1972.
Selected Works:
Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut, 1953
Richards Laboratories, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, 1964
Jewish Community Center Bath House, Ewing, New Jersey, 1955
Jonas Salk Institute for Biological Studies, La Jolla, California, 1965
Erdman Hall Dormitories, Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania, 1965
First Unitarian Church, Rochester, New York, 1967
Phillips Exeter Academy, Library and Dining Hall, New Hampshire, 1972
Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas, 1972
Sources: Brownlee, David B. and David G. Delong. Louis I. Kahn: In the Realm of
Architecture. New York, 1991; Romaldo Giurgola and Jaimini Mehta. Louis I. Kahn.
Zurich/Boulder, Colorado, 1975; Heinz Ronner, Sharad Jhaveri and Alessandro Vesella,
Louis I. Kahn: The Complete Works 1935-1974. Basle/Stuttgart/Boulder, Colorado,
1977; Scully, Vincent, Jr. Louis I. Kahn. New York, 1962.
No single architect did more to create and popularize the philosophy of International
Style architecture than Le Corbusier. Despite the fact that he only designed one building
in the United States, Le Corbusier was the major force in promoting the modern
movement in America, spreading his architectural philosophy in Towards a New
Architecture (1923), The City of Tomorrow (1924) and The Decorative Art of Today
(1925), the first two of which were translated by 1931. Le Corbusier’s books are still an
important part of the curriculum of American design schools. His engaging texts were
the first to compare the art of building with modern technological achievements, such as
grain elevators and ocean liners, and his idea of the house as a “machine for living in”
became a widely quoted (and often misunderstood) catch-phrase of modernism. Le
Corbusier received the Gold Medal, R.I.B.A., in 1959.
Work in America:
Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts,
1961-1964.
Sources: Baker, Geoffrey, and Jacques Gubler. Le Corbusier: Early Works by Charles-
Edouard Jeanneret. London, 1987; Jencks, Charles. Le Corbusier and the Tragic View
of Architecture. Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1973; Jordan, Robert Fumeaux. Le
Corbusier. New York, 1972.
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Ludwig Mies van der Rohe emigrated to the United States in 1938 and ten years later,
found the solution to the struggle for a functional, aesthetically pure tall building,
designing the prototype of the modern steel and glass skyscraper. Most of Mies work in
Germany remained unbuilt, but his pavilion for the Barcelona International Exposition
(1928-1929) remains a classic of modern architecture. As director of the School of
Architecture at the Armour Institute of Technology in Chicago, Mies designed a master
plan for the campus and its major buildings from 1941-1958. His most widely
recognized early skyscrapers--860 Lakeshore Drive, Chicago, and the Seagram Building,
New York--are famous for allowing the steel frame to ornament the curtain wall. Mies’
basic skyscraper recipe was simple, in essence they were “steel and glass slabs,” but his
meticulous attention to proportion and materials set his work apart. The influence of
Mies’ skyscraper prototype can be seen in every American city, although few imitations
compare to the originals. Mies received the Royal Gold Medal, R.I.B.A. in 1959 and the
A.I.A. Gold Medal in 1960.
Sources: Achilles, Rolf, Kevin Harrington, and Charlotte Myhrum, eds. Mies van der
Rohe: Architect as Educator. Chicago, 1986; Blaser, Werner. Mies van der Rohe. New
York, 1965. Johnson, Philip. Mies van der Rohe. New York, 1947. Schulze, Franz. Mies
van der Rohe: A Critical Biography. Chicago, 1985.
Of all the European architects who immigrated to America, none is more identified with a
region than Richard Neutra. Neutra followed his friend and fellow Viennese born
architect Richard Schindler to America in 1923 and worked briefly in the office of Frank
Lloyd Wright. Like Schindler, Neutra found his inspiration in the untested atmosphere of
southern California and, along with Schindler and their followers, developed a regional
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style that would come to define California domestic architecture. His Health House for
Dr. Lovell is universally considered a landmark of the modern movement and
International Style design, and his open plan schools in California created a new standard
for school buildings, opening up the classroom to light and air. Throughout his career
Neutra wrote and spoke about “biorealism” or the relationship between man and his
environment. Neutra was awarded the A.I.A. Gold Medal posthumously in 1977.
Selected Works:
Lovell Health House, Los Angeles, 1929
Channel Heights Housing, San Pedro, California, 1942
Nesbitt House, Brentwood, Los Angeles,1942
Kaufmann Desert House, Palm Springs, California, 1947
Bailey Case Study House, Santa Monica, California, 1947 (1948*)
Tremaine House, Montecito, California, 1948
Northwestern Mutual Fire Insurance, Los Angeles,1951*
Hinds House, Los Angeles, 1951*
Business Education Building, Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa, California,
1953* (with Robert E. Alexander)
Moore House, Ojai, California, 1952 (1954*)
Eagle Rock Playground Club House, Los Angeles, 1953 (1954*)
Garden Grove Community Church, Garden Grove, California, 1961
Corona Avenue Elementary School, Los Angeles
Sources: Boesiger, Willy, ed. Richard Neutra: Buildings and Projects. vol. I. 1923-
1950, Zurich, 1951; vol. II, 1950-1960, Zurich, 1959; vol. III. 1961-1966,
Zurich/London/New York, 1966; Doumato, Lamia. Richard Joseph Neutra: A Select
Biography. Monticello, Illinois, 1980. Hines, Thomas. Richard Neutra and the Search
for Modern Architecture. New York/Oxford, England, 1982. McCoy, Ester. Richard
Neutra. New York, 1960.
A student at the Harvard Graduate School of Design during Gropius’s tenure, I.M. Pei
went on to become one of the country’s most prolific architects, receiving major
commissions throughout the United States for a variety of building types. Pei began his
career working for the New York developer Webb and Knapp, and his design for the
Mile High Center in Denver was an instant success. In 1955, Pei went into partnership
with Henry Cobb and James Inigo Freed, forming I.M. Pei and Partners, New York.
Over the next thirty years, the firm would design office buildings, the Kennedy Library in
Boston, the Dallas Municipal Center and a series of superior art galleries including two
extensions, one for the National Gallery in Washington D.C. and one to the Louvre. If
Pei prefers to write little and philosophize less, the number and prestige of his buildings
certainly speak for themselves. Pei received the A.I.A. Gold Medal in 1979.
Selected Works:
Mile High Center, Denver, 1955 (Kahn & Jacobs Associate Architects)*
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Zeckendorf Plaza Development*
Kips Bay Plaza, New York, 1958
Society Hill Towers and Townhouses, Philadelphia, 1964
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Green Center, Cambridge, 1964
Slayton Townhouse, Washington, D.C., 1964 (I.M. Pei & Associates, with
Kellogg Wong)
National Center for Atmospheric Research, Boulder, Colorado, 1967
University Plaza, New York University, New York, 1967
Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York, 1968
National Airlines Terminal, Kennedy Airport, New York, 1970
Cleo Rogers Memorial County Library, Columbus, Indiana, 1970
Hancock Tower, Boston, Massachusetts, 1973
Sources: Doumato, Lamia. Ieoh Ming Pei: A Bibliography. Monticello, Illinois, 1986;
Suner, Bruno. Pei. Paris, 1988; Wiseman, Carter. The Architecture of I. M. Pei. London,
1990.
Eero Saarinen began his design career with award-winning plywood chairs designed in
collaboration with Charles Eames for the 1938 Museum of Modern Art Organic Design
Furniture competition. He worked with his father during the late 1930s and 1940s, and
the firm of Saarinen and Saarinen was well known in 1948, when Eero won the
competition for the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial in St. Louis. Although the
Memorial arch would not be completed until 1964, the highly publicized commission
instantly established the architect’s reputation. Over the next decade, Saarinen produced
some of the country’s boldest architectural forms for buildings that ranged from a tiny
chapel at M.I.T. to a skating rink at Yale and an airport terminal at Dulles. Historians
have found it difficult to characterize Saarinen’s work--he has been called a “sculptural
formalist--and it appears that he searched for direction throughout his career. Eero
Saarinen received the Gold Medal of the American Institute of Architects posthumously
in 1962.
Selected Works:
Chapel, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1954
Kresge Auditorium, MIT, Cambridge, 1955
General Motors Technical Center, Warren, Michigan, 1956 (1953* and 1955*)
Irwin Union Bank & Trust, Columbus, Indiana, 1956
David S. Ingalls Skating Rink, Yale, New Haven, Connecticut, 1958
Concordia Senior College, Fort Wayne, Indiana, 1959*
United States Embassy Office Building, Oslo, Norway, 1960*
IBM Research Center, Yorktown Heights, New York, 1961
Bell Labs Research Center, Homdel, New Jersey, 1962
Stiles & Morse Colleges, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 1962
Terminal Building, Dulles International Airport, Chantilly, Virginia, 1962
TWA Terminal, New York, New York, 1962
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Deere & Company Headquarters, Moline, Illinois, 1963
Jefferson National Expansion Memorial Arch, St. Louis, Missouri, 1964
North Christian Church, Columbus, Indiana, 1964
Vivian Beaumont Allen Repertory Theater, Lincoln Center, New York, 1964
CBS Headquarters, New York, 1964
Sources: Saarinen, Aline B., ed. Eero Saarinen on His Work. New Haven and London,
1962; Spade, Rupert, Eero Saarinen. New York/London, 1971; Temko, Allan, Eero
Saarinen. New York/London, 1962.
When Eliel Saarinen won second prize in the Chicago Tribune competition of 1922, the
history of modern architecture in America was forever altered. Saarinen’s influential
Tribune project was not built, but it was the catalyst for his immigration to the United
States, where he became director of Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills,
Michigan. At Cranbrook, Saarinen worked to further his educational philosophies,
creating an artist’s community in which life and work were aesthetically unified. From
his Cranbrook studio, Saarinen designed major urban plans, such as the Chicago and
Detroit Lakefronts, but, because his schemes depended on “cellular units,” which were
segregated by function, much of his work was distorted by developers eager to instigate
urban zoning. In America, Saarinen is best known for his deceptively simple designs of
cultural institutions, such as the Kleinhaus Music Hall and Berkshire Music Center, both
designed with his son, Eero. Eliel Saarinen received the A.I.A. Gold Medal in 1947.
The firm of Skidmore, Owings and Merrill (SOM) produced modern architecture on a
scale that foreshadows the output of 21st-century “design-build” firms. After
collaborating on Chicago’s Century of Progress exhibition, Louis Skidmore (1897-1962)
78
and Nathaniel Owings (1903-1984) opened a design office together, adding engineer
John Merrill (1896-1975) to the partnership in 1939. From the beginning, the firm’s
founders valued teamwork. Unlike most contemporary architectural offices, SOM
encouraged young designers by surrounding them with technical support; experts handled
the construction details and supervised building. This system not only resulted in the
retention of many successful designers, but also unusual productivity. Gordon Bunshaft
designed Lever House, the New York office building that brought the firm world-wide
fame upon its completion in 1952. During the 1950s, Bunshaft and SOM were
responsible for most of New York’s prestigious corporate buildings, such as the
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company, the Union Carbide Building and the Pepsi-Cola
Building. By this time they had developed a reputation for office buildings in more rural
settings, such as the Weyerhaeuser headquarters in Tacoma, Washington, and had offices
in New York, Chicago, San Francisco and Portland. When architectural trends began to
favor postmodernism in the 1980s, SOM’s thirty-year reign as the powerhouse of
corporate design came to an end. Louis Skidmore received the A.IA. Gold Medal in
1957, Nathaniel Owings in 1983.
Selected Works:
Illinois Children’s Home & Aid Society, Chicago, Illinois, 1949
Garden Apartments, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, 1950
Lever House, New York, 1952 (Gordon Bunschaft, chief designer)*
Sawyer Biscuit Company Plant, Melrose Park, Illinois, 1953*
Service Schools, Great Lakes, Illinois (Naval Training Center Service Schools;
Gunners’ Mates Building; Fire Control Technicians Building), 1954*
U.S. Naval Postgraduate School, Monterey, California, 1955*
Manufacturers Hanover Trust Company, New York, 1954 (1956*)
Connecticut General Life Insurance Company, Bloomfield, Connecticut, 1958*
Inland Steel Building, Chicago, 1958
Wyeth Laboratories, Inc., Radnor, Pennsylvania, 1957*
Industrial Reactor Laboratories, Plainsborough, New Jersey, 1958*
Computer Center, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 1961
Pepsi Cola World Headquarters, New York, 1959 (1961*)
Upjohn Company, Kalamazoo, Michigan, 1961
U.S. Air Force Academy Chapel, Colorado Springs, Colorado, 1962
Kitt Peak Observatory, Tucson, Arizona, 1962
Beinecke Library, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut, 1963
Tenneco Building, Houston, Texas, 1963
Mauna Kea Beach Hotel, Kamuela, Hawaii, 1965
Alcoa Building, San Francisco, California, 1967
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Frank Lloyd Wright (1867-1959)
Of all the pioneers of modern architecture, Frank Lloyd Wright stands in a class by
himself and, as his many biographies attest, remains a paradoxical genius. Universally
proclaimed America’s greatest architect, Wright was an inspiration for countless aspiring
practitioners, but even his closest imitators remained distant, both from the man and the
spirit of his work. All of Wright’s buildings could be called functional and yet to the
observation of his mentor Louis Sullivan, “form follows function,” Wright replied “so
what?” Wright’s career extended from the late nineteenth-century, when he worked in
Sullivan’s office, to the mid-1950s, when he designed the Guggenheim Museum. Few of
his colleagues experienced the transition into a modern, urban America, and none were
able to produce the quantity and quality of work. Wright’s genius lay in his ability to use
new materials and capitalize on the machine without abandoning old materials, history,
and the intangible qualities of life. His greatest achievements include the luxurious
Prairie Style house, the economical Usonian house, Falling Water and the Johnson Wax
Building, but all of his buildings are noteworthy. Wright received the Royal Gold Medal
of the R.I.B.A. in 1941 and the A.I.A. gold medal in 1949.
Selected Works:
Wright House and Studio, Oak Park, Illinois, 1889-1909 (NHL)
Dana House, Springfield, Illinois, 1904 (NHL)
Martin House, Buffalo, New York, 1904 (NHL)
Larkin Building, Buffalo, New York, 1906
Unity Temple, Oak Park, Illinois, 1906 (NHL)
Coonley House, Riverside, Illinois, 1909 (NHL)
Robie House, Chicago, 1909 (NHL)
Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin, 1911-1938 (NHL)
Hollyhock (Barnsdall) House, Los Angeles, 1921
Storer House, West Hollywood, California, 1923
Ennis House, Los Angeles, California, 1924
Millard House, Pasadena, California, 1924
Jacobs House, Madison, Wisconsin, 1936
Johnson Wax Company, Racine, Wisconsin, 1949 (NHL)
Fallingwater, Bear Run, Pennsylvania, 1936 (NHL)
Jacobs House, Middleton, Wisconsin, 1948
Morris Shop, Maiden Lane, San Francisco, 1949
Taliesin West, Scottsdale, Arizona, 1938-1959 (NHL)
Price Tower, Bartlesville, Oklahoma, 1956
Guggenheim Museum, New York, 1959
Marin County Civic Center, San Rafael, California, 1957-1972 (with Taliesen
Associates)
Sources: Levine, Neil. The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright. Princeton, 1996;
Meehan, Patrick J., ed., Truth Against the World: Frank Lloyd Wright Speaks for an
Organic Architecture. New York, 1987; Murphy, Wendy Buehur, Frank Lloyd Wright.
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Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, 1990; Scully, Vincent, Jr. Frank Lloyd Wright. New
York, 1960.
81
First Presbyterian Church, Cottage Grove, Oregon, 1951
Temple Israel, Swampscott, Massachusetts, 1956 (with Carl Koch & Associates)
First Lutheran Church, Boston, 1957
Church of the Redeemer, Baltimore, 1958 (& Rogers, Taliaferro & Lamb,
Associates)
Juilliard School of Music and Alice Tully Hall, Lincoln Center Plaza, New York,
1969 (with Eduardo Catalano & Helge Westermann)
82
Case Study House 16, Los Angeles, 1951
Courtyard Apartments, Hollywood, California, 1952
Rosen House, Los Angeles, 1961
Scientific Data Systems Building (now Xerox), El Segundo, California, 1966
Joseph Esherick (1914-1998)
Esherick House, Ross, California, 1940
Bermak House, Oakland, California, 1963
University of California, College of Environmental Design, Wurster Hall,
Berkeley, 1965 (with Vernon De Mars and Donald Olsen)
83
Weston Havens House, Berkeley, California, 1941
Wyle House, Ojai, California, 1948
Ralph Johnson House, Los Angeles, 1951
Eisenberg House, Dallas, 1958
Greenwood Mausoleum, Fort Worth, 1959
Hellmuth, Obata & Kassabaum (George F. Hellmuth, 1907-; Gyo Obata, 1923-;
George E. Kassabaum, 1920-)
Church of St. Sylvester, Eminence, Missouri, 1954
Priory of St. Mary and St. Louis, Creve Coeur, Missouri, 1962
84
Mildred B. Cooper Memorial Chapel, Bella Vista, Arkansas, 1988
Kocher & Frey (Alfred Lawrence Kocher, 1885-1969; Albert Frey, 1903-)
Aluminaire House, 1931
Studies Building, Black Mountain College, North Carolina, 1943
85
Erich Mendelsohn (1887-1953)
B’nai Amoona Synagogue and Community Center, St. Louis, Missouri, 1950
Maimonides (Mount Zion) Hospital, San Francisco,1950
Russell House, Pacific Heights, San Francisco, 1951
Park Synagogue and Community Center, Cleveland, Ohio, 1952
Temple Emanuel, Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1953
86
Tuskegee Institute Chapel, Tuskegee, Alabama, 1969
87
Palo Alto Medical Center, nursing wing, Stanford University, Palo Alto,
California, 1959
Huntington Hartford Museum, New York, 1964
88
Norman High School, Norman, Oklahoma, 1954* (Perkins & Will; Caudill,
Rowlett, Scott and Associates)
International Minerals & Chemical Corporation, Administrative and Research
Center, Skokie, Illinois, 1958*
89
ADDITIONAL MODERN BUILDINGS RECOMMENDED FOR NHL STATUS
1
John Jacobus, Jr., Philip Johnson (New York: George Braziller, 1962), 15-16.
2
Thomas A. P. Van Leeuwen, “The Skyward Trend of Thought: Some Ideas on the History of the
Methodology of the Skyscraper,” in American Architecture: Innovation and Tradition. David G. Delong,
et al, eds., New York: Rizzoli, 1986.
3
The building also featured a two-story castellated tower. See Richard Webster, Philadelphia Preserved
(Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1976), 81.
4
The first elevator or “steam lift” was developed in 1857 by Elisha Graves Otis and installed in the five-
story Haughwout Building (1956-1957) in New York. The steam lift was introduced to Chicago in 1864.
C. W. Baldwin invented the first hydraulic lift in 1870.
5
Henry-Russell Hitchcock, Architecture: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (New York: Penguin Books,
1958, Reprint, 1985), 335.
6
Le Baron Jenney’s second Leiter building, completed in 1880, is a National Historic Landmark.
7
William H. Jordy, American Buildings and Their Architects: Progressive and Academic Ideals at the
Turn of the Century (New York: Doubleday & Company, 1972), 38.
8
Jordy, American Buildings and Their Architects: The Impact of European Modernism (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1986), 59.
90
9
The Chicago Tribune Tower was erected in 1923-1925 on Michigan Avenue.
10
Ada Louis Huxtable describes the difference between modern skyscrapers, the avant-garde International
Style borrowed from Europe, and the modernistic, which we now refer to as Art Moderne or Deco. See
Ada Louis Huxtable, The Tall Building Artistically Reconsidered: the Search for a Skyscraper Style (New
York: Pantheon Books, 1982), 39-44.
11
Marcus Whiffen and Frederick Koeper, American Architecture: 1860-1976 (Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T.
Press, 1987), 337.
12
Hitchcock, Architecture, 622.
13
Hitchcock, Architecture, 561.
14
One of the most widely praised skyscrapers of the 1960s is the Ford Foundation (1967), New York,
Kevin Roche, John Dinkeloo & Associates. Architectural historian Carter Wiseman remarks that it “made
a major contribution to humanizing modernism,” with its public atrium visible from the street. According
to Wiseman, the firm’s later buildings did not live up to this standard. See Wiseman, Shaping a Nation,
319.
15
AIA Journal (July 1976): 152.
16
Ada Louise Huxtable, “Skyscrapers,” in Built in the U.S.A. Diane Maddex, ed. Washington, D.C.:
National Trust for Historic Preservation, 1985.
17
Vincent Scully, “American Houses: Thomas Jefferson to Frank Lloyd Wright,” in Edgar Kaufmann, Jr.,
ed., The Rise of an American Architecture (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1970), 163-164.
18
James F. O’Gorman, Three American Architects: Richardson, Sullivan, and Wright, 1865-1915
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991), 58-59.
19
O’Gorman, Three American Architects, 59.
20
Carter Wiseman, Twentieth-Century American Architecture: The Buildings and Their Makers (New
York: W.W. Norton, 2000), 77.
21
Scully, “American Houses,” 186.
22
For more information about the textile houses, particularly La Minatura, see Neil Levine, The
Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996), 114-169.
23
The house was designed for Philip Lovell, a “naturopath” who practiced medicine without drugs and had
acquired a large public following. See Thomas S. Hines, Richard Neutra and the Search for Modern
Architecture (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1982), 89.
24
F.R.S. Yorke, The Modern House (Great Britain: The Architectural Press, 1935), 208.
25
Marcus Whiffen and Frederick Koeper, American Architecture, Volume 2: 1860-1976 (Cambridge,
Mass.: MIT Press, 1987), 343.
26
Wiseman, Twentieth-Century American Architecture, 278.
27
Alice T. Friedman, Women and the Making of the Modern House (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1998),
134.
28
Whiffen and Koeper, 374.
29
Diana Ketcham, “A Sea Change Where the View Once Ruled,” New York Times (Thursday, May 31,
2001), B1.
30
Phoebe Stanton, “Religious Architecture,” in Built in the U.S.A. (Washington, D.C.: National Trust for
Historic Preservation, 1985), 141.
31
O’Gorman, Three American Architects, 25.
32
Cram was “considered the foremost church architect in the United States in the first decades of the
twentieth century” and “firmly believed in the need to search the past for inspiration for new buildings….”
See Marilyn J. Chiat, America’s Religious Architecture (New York: John Wiley and Sons, 1997), 120.
33
Jordy, American Buildings and Their Architects, vol. 5: The Impact of European Modernism in the Mid-
Twentieth Century, 303.
34
Hitchcock, Architecture: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries, 451.
35
See Joseph M. Siry, Unity Temple: Frank Lloyd Wright and Architecture for Liberal Religion
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 245-6.
36
Albert Christ-Janer and Mary Mix Foley, Modern Church Architecture (New York: McGraw Hill
Books, 1962), 257.
37
Christ-Janer and Foley, Modern Church Architecture, 153. The authors cite a “poll of 35 leading
architects, editors, and specialists in church design, conducted by the National Council of Churches,” that
91
“voted Christ Lutheran in Minneapolis the best church erected in the United States during the preceding 25
years.”
38
Christ-Janer and Foley, Modern Religious Architecture, 103.
39
Neil Levine, Frank Lloyd Wright, 425.
40
Siry, Unity Temple, 244.
41
William Allin Storrer, The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright (Cambridge: The M.I.T. Press, 1974),
399.
42
Mark Gelernter, 275-276.
43
Marcus Whiffen and Frederick Koeper, American Architecture, volume 2, 382.
44
Henry Russell Hitchcock, The Pelican History of Art, 569.
45
John M. Jacobus, Jr. Philip Johnson (New York: George Braziller, 1962), 41.
46
Thomas S. Hines, Richard Neutra and the Search for Modern Architecture (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1982), 287.
47
David B. Brownlee and David G. DeLong, Louis I. Kahn: In the Realm of Architecture (New York:
Rizzoli International Publications, 1991), 143.
48
Belluschi became the dean of MIT’s architecture department in 1951, and was awarded the A.I.A. gold
medal in 1972. For more information about his life and religious buildings see Meredith L. Clausen, Pietro
Belluschi: Modern American Architect (Cambridge, Massachusetts: the MIT Press), 1994.
49
Stimpson, A Field Guide to Landmarks of Modern Architecture in the United States, 208.
50
Carole Rifkind, Contemporary American Architecture, 199.
51
Paul Venable Turner, Campus: An American Planning Tradition (New York, 1984), 19-20.
52
Turner, Campus, 227.
53
Carter Wiseman, Shaping a Nation, 131.
54
The Wrightian buildings at Florida Southern College include Annie Merner Pfeiffer Chapel (1938), T. R.
Roux Library (1941), Three Seminar Buildings (1940), Industrial Arts Building (1942), Administration
Building (1945), Science and Cosmography Building (1953) and Minor Chapel (Danforth Chapel), 1954.
Buildings not connected by esplanades were added later and are by other architects. See William Allin
Storrer, The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright (Cambridge, Mass.: M.I.T. Press, 1987), 251.
55
John Jacobus, Jr., Philip Johnson (NY: George Braziller, 1962), 35.
56
Paul Venable Turner, Campus: An American Planning Tradition, 267.
57
Scully, American Architecture and Urbanism, 208-9.
58
Rupert Spade, Eero Sarrinen (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1971), 122.
59
Whiffen and Koeper, American Architecture, vol. 2, 391-393. Rudolph also designed the Married
Students Housing for Yale in 1961.
60
Scully, American Architecture and Urbanism, 208.
61
Wiffen and Koeper, American Architecture, 405.
62
Gowans, Styles and Types of North American Architecture, 313.
63
Leland M. Roth, A Concise History of Modern Architecture, 308.
64
Roth, A Concise History, 309.
65
Jordy, The Impact of European Modernism in the Mid-Twentieth Century, 167.
66
Gaines, The Campus as a Work of Art, 63.
67
“College Buildings: St. John’s, Science and Art in a Venerable Setting,” Architectural Record, vol. 126,
no. 3 (September 1959): 176-179.
68
Jordy, The Impact of European Modernism, 382.
69
Alan Gowans, Styles and Types of North American Architecture (New York: Harper/Collins, 1992), 306.
70
Turner, 271, Campus.
71
The firm of MLTW/Turnbull Associates & Charles W. Moore Associates worked on the project in the
early 70s.
72
Mildred F. Schmertz, ed. Campus Planning and Design, 147.
73
Turner, Campus, 266.
74
Helen Searing, New American Art Museums (New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 1982), 27.
In the 1990s the Wadsworth Athenaeum was renovated beyond recognition. Only the original façade
remains.
75
Furness designed the building with George W. Hewitt, his partner from 1871-1875.
92
76
James F. O’Gorman, The Architecture of Frank Furness (Philadelphia: Philadelphia Museum of Art,
1973), 37.
77
Searing, New American Art Museums, 38.
78
For a brief description of the Springfield Museum of Fine Arts (originally the Gray Museum) See
Searing, New American Art Museums, 44-47.
79
Carol Rifkind, A Field Guide to Contemporary American Architecture (New York: Dutton, 1998), 155.
80
See “Theme 4: The Modern College Campus” for further discussion of the Yale Art Gallery addition.
81
Rifkind, A Field Guide, 158.
82
Searing, New American Art Museums, 56.
83
John M. Jacobus, Jr. (New York: George Braziller, 1962), 37.
84
Paul Goldberger, New Yorker (December 23 and 30, 2002), 159. Goldberger’s praise of the Kimball Art
Museum is particularly significant in relation to his general opinion of 1960s-1970s museums: “If the
museums are the keys to what our communities value…they present a confused picture of the American
community right now…There is little in the way of a consistent philosophy, either of museum management
or of architecture that one can glean from this potpourri [of museum designs].” See Helen Searing, New
American Art Museums, 56.
85
In Modern Architecture Through Case Studies, Peter Blundell Jones writes that the “breadth of concerns”
addressed by the Kimball Art Museum “has few rivals this century: Wright, Aalto and Asplund come to
mind, and Le Corbusier in late works like La Tourette. See Jones, Modern Architecture (Oxford:
Architectural Press, 2002), 229.
86
Neil Levine, The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996), 355.
93